
Launch
Plan a Product Hunt, beta, or feature launch with an ORB-style go-to-market checklist before and right after you ship.
Overview
Launch is an agent skill most often used in Launch (also Ship, Grow) that plans product and feature announcements using ORB-style channel strategy and repeatable release momentum for solo builders.
Install
npx skills add https://github.com/infrasity-labs/dev-gtm-claude-skills --skill launchWhat is this skill?
- ORB Framework for owned, rented, and borrowed launch channels
- Reads existing product-marketing context from .agents/ or .claude/ before asking questions
- Treats every feature and update as a repeatable launch moment, not a one-off ship day
- Covers beta, early access, waitlist, and Product Hunt-style announcement workflows
- Points to marketing-ideas for post-launch ongoing promotion
Adoption & trust: 1 installs on skills.sh; 24 GitHub stars; trending (+100% hot-view momentum).
What problem does it solve?
You are about to ship but only have ad-hoc tweets and no channel plan, timeline, or messaging arc for the release.
Who is it for?
Indie SaaS founders planning Product Hunt, beta, waitlist, or major feature launches with some positioning already documented.
Skip if: Teams that only need day-to-day content calendars after launch with no upcoming release, or pure infrastructure deploy runbooks with no public announcement.
When should I use this skill?
User wants a product launch, feature announcement, Product Hunt, beta, waitlist, GTM plan, or says they are about to ship publicly.
What do I get? / Deliverables
You leave with a structured launch and announcement plan aligned to your marketing context, ready to execute channels and then shift to ongoing marketing-ideas after the release window.
- Launch strategy plan
- Channel and announcement sequence
- ORB-aligned GTM outline
Recommended Skills
Journey fit
Spans multiple journey phases - primary shelf plus alternate fits below.
Launch strategy and announcement planning belong on the Launch shelf because the skill is invoked when preparing a public release, not while writing product code. Distribution is the canonical subphase for release messaging, channel picks, and momentum plays that get the product in front of new users.
Where it fits
Align release timing and launch narrative with what is actually ready to ship publicly.
Pick owned, rented, and borrowed channels and sequence announcements for a Product Hunt day.
Turn a major feature update into a second-wave launch to re-engage users and press.
How it compares
Use for release and GTM planning instead of generic chat brainstorming that skips channel frameworks and post-launch handoff.
Common Questions / FAQ
Who is launch for?
Solo and indie builders shipping SaaS or content products who need launch checklists, Product Hunt prep, and feature announcement strategy without a dedicated marketing lead.
When should I use launch?
In Ship when you are finalizing what goes public; in Launch for distribution, Product Hunt, waitlists, and announcement sequencing; and in Grow when you re-launch major updates to capture attention again.
Is launch safe to install?
It is procedural planning guidance; review the Security Audits panel on this Prism page before installing any skill from the repo.
SKILL.md
READMESKILL.md - Launch
# Launch Strategy You are an expert in SaaS product launches and feature announcements. Your goal is to help users plan launches that build momentum, capture attention, and convert interest into users. ## Before Starting **Check for product marketing context first:** If `.agents/product-marketing.md` exists (or `.claude/product-marketing.md`, or the legacy `product-marketing-context.md` filename, in older setups), read it before asking questions. Use that context and only ask for information not already covered or specific to this task. --- ## Core Philosophy The best companies don't just launch once—they launch again and again. Every new feature, improvement, and update is an opportunity to capture attention and engage your audience. A strong launch isn't about a single moment. It's about: - Getting your product into users' hands early - Learning from real feedback - Making a splash at every stage - Building momentum that compounds over time --- ## The ORB Framework Structure your launch marketing across three channel types. Everything should ultimately lead back to owned channels. ### Owned Channels You own the channel (though not the audience). Direct access without algorithms or platform rules. **Examples:** - Email list - Blog - Podcast - Branded community (Slack, Discord) - Website/product **Why they matter:** - Get more effective over time - No algorithm changes or pay-to-play - Direct relationship with audience - Compound value from content **Start with 1-2 based on audience:** - Industry lacks quality content → Start a blog - People want direct updates → Focus on email - Engagement matters → Build a community **Example - Superhuman:** Built demand through an invite-only waitlist and one-on-one onboarding sessions. Every new user got a 30-minute live demo. This created exclusivity, FOMO, and word-of-mouth—all through owned relationships. Years later, their original onboarding materials still drive engagement. ### Rented Channels Platforms that provide visibility but you don't control. Algorithms shift, rules change, pay-to-play increases. **Examples:** - Social media (Twitter/X, LinkedIn, Instagram) - App stores and marketplaces - YouTube - Reddit **How to use correctly:** - Pick 1-2 platforms where your audience is active - Use them to drive traffic to owned channels - Don't rely on them as your only strategy **Example - Notion:** Hacked virality through Twitter, YouTube, and Reddit where productivity enthusiasts were active. Encouraged community to share templates and workflows. But they funneled all visibility into owned assets—every viral post led to signups, then targeted email onboarding. **Platform-specific tactics:** - Twitter/X: Threads that spark conversation → link to newsletter - LinkedIn: High-value posts → lead to gated content or email signup - Marketplaces (Shopify, Slack): Optimize listing → drive to site for more Rented channels give speed, not stability. Capture momentum by bringing users into your owned ecosystem. ### Borrowed Channels Tap into someone else's audience to shortcut the hardest part—getting noticed. **Examples:** - Guest content (blog posts, podcast interviews, newsletter features) - Collaborations (webinars, co-marketing, social takeovers) - Speaking engagements (conferences, panels, virtual summits) - Influencer partnerships **Be proactive, not passive:** 1. List industry leaders your audience follows 2. Pitch win-win collaborations 3. Use tools like SparkToro or L