You can be on Entrepreneur’s cover!

25 Creative Ways to Promote Your App For Free You don't need to spend advertising dollars to earn customers. Here are 25 ways to do it for free.

By Rahul Varshneya

entrepreneur daily

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

I've been meeting more and more app entrepreneurs who have made it in the app world without spending a penny on promoting their app. And I've known entrepreneurs who've earned more than a million dollars selling their app, largely promoting it for free. Some have made use of press publicity and some generated a lot of buzz on social media. While some manually recruited customers, others had tremendous customer referrals.

In my experience, it does not make sense to pay advertising dollars to get customers because the cost of a customer acquisition is never lower than the price of the app. What's more, there are many ways out there to promote your app for free. Here are 25 of your most creative options:

Build a microsite

This one or two-pager showcases your app to the web audience. Take cues from Snapchat and Path.

Shutterstock

Build a teaser website

Do this a month or two before your launch to collect email addresses of people who would like to know when the app launches.

Start a blog

Attach it to your microsite. Write interesting content that will draw people to your website. Buffer app does this really effectively.

Twin Design / Shutterstock.com

Share your content

Use your Twitter, Facebook, Google+ and LinkedIn profiles to promote the app several times in a week.

Create a product video

Make it creative, funny, thought-provoking or personal. Tell the story, but in a way people can identify with. Here's a great one as example from the Dollar Shave Club.

Get press, tons of it

Entrepreneur Neil Patel says: "Press is the best way to kick start your startup, and the best way to get it is to manually reach out to journalists."

Pitch to app review websites

Sites like 148apps, AppStoreApps and AppAdvice can generate a lot of buzz for your app if they mention it.

Contact bloggers who would care

Identify bloggers who write on niches that relate to your app. For instance, a children's app can be pitched to bloggers write write for mothers.

Apply for awards

Look into awards such as the Kiip Build Fund or The Mobileys. If you win, you also get a ton of press, not to mention winner's booty.

Shutterstock.com

Start a podcast

Publish it on iTunes or your own website. Draw content from the niche your app caters to most.

Always be collecting emails

Gather potential customer emails through Facebook, Twitter or your website. An email list of people who have opted in is a powerful marketing tool.

Shutterstock.com

Create a six-second how-to series

Make the most of Vine with videos potential customers will find useful. The hashtag #howto is one of the top trending tags on Vine.

Post on Pinterest

Use blog images, infographics and visual content from your app to create content on your Pinterest board. You can even use happy customer photos or hold contests.

Use Dubbler

Promote your blog posts or content having to do with your app's niche on Dubbler -- a 60-second audio social network.

Manually recruit customers

The creator behind Canvsly reaches out to local art schools, libraries and pediatricians to get more customers. Know your audience and find them.

Shutterstock

Run a contest

For example, you can encourage people to tweet and share content on their social networks promoting your app. A random person every week can win a promo code to download your app for free if it is a paid one.

Create a Facebook group

Form a group for people with common interests related to your app's niche so they can meet and socialize regularly. If your app caters to hikers, for example, create a hiking group.

Get speaking opportunities

Research events that touch on the topic your app addresses and make an appearance. Start small and get recognized as an authority in the space.

Take advantage of voicemail

Include a creative mention of your app in your phone's voicemail recording.

Shutterstock | Enhanced by Entrepreneur

Be obsessive about resolving negative reviews

Remember: A happy customer is a brand ambassador for your app.

Make good use of App Store Optimization

You can find it at the app store.

Shutterstock

Contact admins of related Facebook pages

Look for pages with 100k+ likes and reach out to their admins. Make sure these pages have something to do with the focus of your app. Then give them a compelling reason to mention it.

Optimize your email signature

Provide a catchy one-liner about your app along with the link to download it in your email signature.

Consider offering a promotional price

If your app is a pay-to-download one, consider a promotional pricing of $0.99 during the launch time. This price point encourages impulse purchases.

Integrate social within the app

This will make it obvious to users to share with others. Path app allows users to share photographs on social networks and Draw Something makes sure you rope in a friend or more.

Rahul Varshneya

Co-founder at Arkenea

Rahul Varshneya is the co-founder of Arkenea, an award-winning web and mobile app development agency.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Editor's Pick

Growing a Business

To Achieve Sustainable Success, You Need to Stop Focusing on Disruption. Here's Why — and What You Must Focus on Instead.

Instead of zeroing in solely on disruptive innovation, embrace a pragmatic approach to innovation, recognizing and leveraging the potential within ongoing industry shifts.

Business News

Mark Zuckerberg Says This CEO Is the 'Taylor Swift' of Tech

Meta's CEO posed with Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang on Instagram Wednesday.

Real Estate

3 Emerging Trends Shaping the Future of Real Estate

These three innovations are reshaping the real estate industry — discover tips for effectively covering these trends.

Leadership

What We Have to Gain By Talking About Grief and Loss At Work

I lost my husband to cancer during Covid — here's how it changed how I lead at work.

Side Hustle

This Mom Started a Side Hustle After a 'Shocking' Realization in the Toy Aisle. Her Product Was in Macy's Within the Year — Seeing Nearly $350,000 in Sales.

Elenor Mak, now founder of Jilly Bing, didn't plan to start a business — but the search for a doll that looked like her daughter inspired her to do just that.

Fundraising

Avoid These 9 Pitch Deck Mistakes When Asking Others For Money

Crafting an efficient pitch deck requires serious effort, but at least it's not wandering in the dark since certain rules are shaped by decades of relationships between startups and investors.