Rule 18.
Launching beta releases lets you work out links and attract fans
Software companies have long used ‘beta' releases to let
customers try out a product prior to the official release. Web companies do the
same. They launch in beta, with no PR, no ad campaign, and let customers tell
them what works and what doesn't.
If you don't launch in beta, you're probably making the million-dollar
mistake as beta customers tend to be more forgiving than others. NextPlanetOver
recruited 300 beta testers from Net newsgroups like rec.arts.sfsuperman, luring
them with NextPlanetOver.com T-shirts and mugs.
Beta testers help you probe the site for weaknesses like a
cumbersome registration process, a search function which is unforgiving with
abbreviations and punctuation, few images and descriptions of products. They
help you prioritize what to do next. It's a great, cheap way to get fundamentally
critical feedback.
Beta tests also produce customers -- ones energized by the
process of helping a Web venture in its early days. To customers, a beta tag
on a site is simply an acknowledgment that the site is still a work in progress.