The Mint Marketing Plan For ANY Business Launch
The Mint Marketing Plan For ANY Business Launch
The Mint Marketing Plan For ANY Business Launch
MARKETING
PLAN
FOR ANY
BUSINESS LAUNCH
OkDork by
NOAH KAGAN
© Copyright 2025 Noah Kagan
Quick Intro
From Noah:
Hola,
Be epic,
Noah
CONTENTS
Why Mint Marketing? 4
Week 6: SEO 24
Week 8: SEM 27
Patzer is the founder of Mint.com — the personal finance tool that eventually sold to Intuit
for $170 million in 2009.
Noah is the founder of AppSumo, the store for entrepreneurs. He and the rest of the team
grew AppSumo to an audience reach of more than 750,000 people.
How? By using the same hyper-growth marketing tactics that Noah applied to Mint.com’s
initial public launch.
Noah’s challenge back in the Mint days was to create a marketing plan that would deliver
100,0000 users within six months after launch.
This Action Course will reveal, for the first time, the full Mint Marketing Plan that Noah
developed and implemented with the strategic support of Silicon Valley’s most influential
minds, investor Dave McClure of 500 Startups, entrepreneur Hiten Shah of KISSMetrics, and
Aaron Patzer of Mint.com.
Guaranteeing success means eliminating “hope marketing,” where you carry out a
handful of random tactics you’ve read about on marketing blogs, all while anxiously
eyeing a highly unspecific goal, like “grow 2x” or “get more customers.”
Quant-based marketing demands that you break down your marketing strategy into
multiple tactics (your “feeder channels”) that are all distinct, measurable, and easily
magnified or minimized.
The next chapter breaks down each of these steps in detail, including workspace sections
that you should complete to design your own quant-based marketing plan.
The Mint Marketing Plan takes you from zero to launch in 12 weeks. Here is an
overview of what we will cover in this chapter:
Week 6 - SEO
 Find relevant keywords, input into Keywords Sheet
 Set up site using SEO best practices
 Begin drafting keyword-specific content
Week 7 – Content
 Begin building content strategy based on popular keywords
 Find popular posts in your niche, structure blog series around similar topics
Week 12 – Launch!
 Set up online community for users
 Launch to your email list
 Reach out to news outlets to get media attention
Post-launch – Distribution
 Focus on high-value distribution channels to reach more users
 Young professionals. “They don’t want to waste time and want an easy way to see
their finances.”
 Geeks. Noah suspected there were a lot of techies looking for deals and ways to
save money: “We could easily get them as early adopters and then transition later to
the mainstream.”
 People in debt. “They want to find new ways to save more money and get out of
debt.”
 Moms & new families. “Moms like knowing they can save for their goals.”
 Personal finance. People already interested in the niche topic of personal finance
were likely to be great target customers.
Now it’s your turn to define your customer targets and what goes on in their heads. The next
workspace asks you to come up with eight niche customer segments, each with a different
problem and way of using your product or service.
The key here is getting inside the head of your customer. Who are they? What are their
biggest fears and concerns? What excites and motivates them most?
What kind of personality do they have, and where do they like to spend money?
Customer clairvoyance – defining and deeply understanding the needs and personalities of
your customers – is the foundation for bringing the Mint Marketing Plan to your business, so
take extra care and time in this workspace.
Seems obvious, but what defined the conversion of a product that hadn’t even launched yet?
Noah knew the best marketers never turn a customer away, even if the shelves of the store
are still being stocked. To capture inbound customer interest, the pre-launch Mint landing
page featured a prominent email registration form: “It’s coming! Sign up here and we’ll let
you know before everyone else.”
Aside from capturing emails, Mint’s landing page had another goal – to foster new users’
trust of Mint.com and to reassure them that the site was a secure place to store sensitive
information about personal finances.
BE HUMAN. Here, marketers can take a cue from the maligned genre of reality TV. Whether
you love it or you hate it, the “reality” style is an undeniably marketable and engaging format
for TV content. Producers understand that we’re magnetically drawn to the relatable human
elements in content and products we use.
Next, write your own story. People like hearing stories about the people behind the products
and sites they use. Why did you start your company? What solution do you want to provide
with your product or service?
So, think of how you can give users a tour of the product. How can you let them “play” before
committing to signing up or buying?
List three specific ways to let users test drive your product. (See Action Guide).
Contact customers and ask them if they’d be willing to give you a testimonial about how your
product has solved one of their problems.
Your best salespeople are your customers, so be sure to treat them that way. How can you
make them want to share your product? What can you do for them in return for a testimonial?
Contact 10 customers (or more) and pick the strongest three quotes to use on your website.
Use the Action Guide to keep track of this information.
 Example Image: John Smith, “Using this product saves me 5 hours every week.
Game changer!”
No one wants to be the first to try something, so provide social proof to set your prospect’s
mind at ease. This can be a counter, progress bar, or some other method of showing that
other users are successfully using your product.
1. Ask for minimal information, get each user to enter their email, and prompt them for
a password.
2. Take users right into Mint and make it easy to start using it.
3. Highlight the features they get from registering.
4. Highlight security measures that keep their information safe.
 What are the basic pieces of information you need from a new user?
 What is the process after they enter that information (hint: minimize the steps)?
 How can you get them immediately engaged with the product?
 Which features will you highlight after they’ve converted?
 What are your customers’ fears (refer to your survey results)? How can you alleviate
them?
To persuade users to enter their email address, ask questions that will pique their interests,
get a sense of their wants, or allude to a great benefit. This is a good step to take once you
start seeing some traffic, especially before launch.
Write your own questions using the following three writing prompts, then use them to entice
users to enter their email address on your homepage.
TOOLS
YouTube – Doing a simple search for your product keywords on YouTube can show you the
most popular videos, thus giving you an idea of what people are interested in and potentially
revealing several influencers in a niche.
List 5 popular videos or producers for your niche (could be how-to videos, discussion
videos, etc). See Action Guide.
Google Alerts – This is another easy tool that allows you to keep on top of conversations in
your industry. It provides alerts when people are talking about something relevant to your
startup. Use these alerts for very specific keywords that relate closely to your product — that
way, you can engage in conversations tailored to you and see which blogs are discussing
something you care about.
Twitter – Using Twitter search is another easy way to find influencers in a niche. You can use
these tools to determine the top Twitter influencers for any topic you care about, and get a
feel for the types of conversations going on in your niche.
Find 10 popular Twitter accounts related to your niche. Don’t focus only on the top people,
as often the mid-level influencers (less than 40,000 followers) are easier to reach. List
these in the Action Guide.
Search engines – Search engines are a simple way to find the top blogs in a given industry.
Simply search for things like “top blogs for x” or “best x blogs” to find different resources
frequently linked to and discussed online. You can use these tools to search for “personal
finance forums” as well.
To collect this information, use Google Ads to collect traffic statistics about the number of
unique visitors, pages viewed, and other key information for each blog. Be sure to write this
information into your Targeted Blogs Sheet to track your target blogs.
List the metrics that are important for you to measure, along with how you can monitor
them. A few prompts are filled in to help you get started in the Action Guide.
Most importantly, Noah also tracked various marketing channels using the tools above.
He tracked confirmation of marketing channels, click-through rates for each channel, the
number of users from each, and the cost per user from each site, as well as blogs and
advertisements. This allowed him to determine which sites and channels were working
best, and which ones he needed to work on or abandon.
You want to understand how users use the product, what they love and hate, and the
problems they have. Add live chat to your website, call your customers randomly for
feedback, and proactively email them to understand their thoughts on your product.
Having this information will allow you to improve your positioning, make a better
product, and strengthen your relationships with your customers. Since your customers
are your best salespeople, you want them to love you. Asking for their feedback and
help is an easy way to do that.
Most of us know that marketing that “sticks” is marketing that makes sense to the customer,
where benefits are quantified in the customer’s own terms.
Before launching, Noah understood the importance of knowing exactly which messages
would resonate with Mint’s targeted audience. He knew that it wasn’t enough for the
messaging to be targeted; it also had to be articulated in the customer’s own terms.
The most fascinating part about testing messaging is that it’s a test. It’s not permanent, and
test results can and should be cycled back to the marketing and development teams to be
built right back into the product.
Testing messaging with Mint allowed the Mint team to determine which features and benefits
were most important to their customers — those were the foundational elements to stress
and build upon.
Testing messaging means quantifying what is important to your users rather than just
guessing.
1. Please tell us your age, gender, location, and your favorite food.
2. How do you currently handle your personal finances? (Quicken, Money, Excel,
nothing, etc.)
3. What financial problems/needs have you had in the past year?
4. What purchases/financial decisions are you likely to make in the next one to three
years?
5. How much detail do you want to know about your finances? (a lot, a little, some,
none)
6. What would make you feel comfortable/uncomfortable about giving your financial
information to a third-party financial website?
7. Where do you learn about finance-related info?
8. Which sites? Who do you trust or not trust?
To do this, come up with a list of questions that cover the following categories:
 Demographics. This could be age, gender, location, activities, etc.
 Customer Profile. What are their current stats where your niche is concerned? This
could be beginner/expert, low-performing/high performing, or in the case of Mint,
people who were deep in debt versus those who were financially fit.
 Problems/Needs. What needs do they have? What are their pain points and fears?
 Current Solutions. What do they currently use to solve their problems?
 Buying Behavior. What other related products are they buying? How much?
How often?
 Information Sources. What are their top news sources (related to your niche and not
related to it)?
1. Underwater: They need to get their act together, immediately cut expenses,
manage debt, make money
2. Treading Water: They need to better understand expenses, make a budget, save
more, and spend less to get their finances under control
3. Above Water: They’re focused on saving money, getting the best deals, saving for
large purchases, and learning more money tips
To do this, look at your survey results and pay special attention to your Customer Profile and
Problems responses. If clear differences emerge, create different segments for each group
of customers.
If you have two or more groups, describe them in the Action Guide.
Using the information from steps 2 to 3 and the above, you should have a good idea of
who your users are and why they want your product. The next step is to use this information
to determine what your company stands for (brand promises), your unique benefits, and
several taglines for the product.
Coming up with brand promises and taglines is a two-step process. Ultimately, a good
tagline or brand promise should answer one question – what should come to mind when
customers think about your product?
List five unique solutions your product or service provides in the Action Guide.
Look at your unique solutions and write a specific, benefit-driven brand promise.
At Mint, Noah tested each of these brand promises and messages using Google Adwords.
The company would set up landing pages and drive cheap traffic to the pages. Then, by
analyzing which users converted based on the landing page they saw, Noah determined the
most effective messages for each group of potential users.
SEO is a strong marketing strategy, though it often takes a while to see results. With Mint,
Noah made SEO a major focus because of the delicate nature of the product. This meant
churning out relevant, interesting articles related to personal finance (more on that in the
Content Strategy section below).
Because Mint was asking for so much sensitive financial data, he felt that if
people came from Google (a trusted source), they would be more likely to trust Mint.com. On
top of that, Mint.com was really the first company to actively try to educate consumers about
personal finance. They did it in an engaging, interesting, and fun way that a lot of people
appreciated.
Mint also targeted certain keywords that they found were relevant to what their audience
was searching for. For every popular personal finance term that people were searching for
on Google, Mint created a piece of content that corresponded with that search term. This
meant that the content would naturally rank highly, would be very targeted and informative,
and had a higher chance of exposing a new customer to Mint’s product.
KEYWORD PLANNER
In order to find the keywords that potential
users were searching for, Noah used Google
Keyword Tool (now called Keyword Planner).
To come up with initial terms, try to put
yourself in the mindset of your customer
– what would you type into Google if you
wanted to learn how to track your money
online?
GOOGLE TRENDS
Noah also used Google Trends to determine which keywords people were talking about
and searching for more often. Using these two tools allowed him to understand the types of
keywords his potential users were searching for, and create content geared towards each
of those terms.
To get started on your content strategy, first identify mid-level bloggers with an engaged
reader base, using the tactics outlined earlier. Also, look at what your target customers
are reading by going through their survey answers. Then use the Targeted Blogs Sheet to
determine which blogs may be worth reaching out to for guest posts.
Noah outlined a content strategy that included two posts each week, organizing the posts in
a series structure (e.g. top ten features once each week, personal finance terms explained
every other week). Then he determined which keywords they needed to build content around.
Mint’s content strategy revolved around having their own strong content, working with other
popular bloggers to do guest posts (and having bloggers write on Mint’s site in turn), and
making several content distribution deals. With this content strategy in place, Mint.com was
the top personal finance blog within a year of writing.
To get keyword ideas, Noah searched online to see what competitors like LowerMyBills.com,
geezeo.com, wesabe.com, and uswitch.com were doing. To uncover ads that the competition
was using, he used sites like mixrank.com and spyfu.com. Both give deep analysis about
which ads the competition employs. You can also check incoming links to your competitors
on Alexa, and see the profiles of their customers via their Facebook pages and Quantcast
data.
For Mint, Noah wanted to get financial heavyweight endorsers like Suze Orman and Robert
Kiyosaki. Although he did many other things right, going for these individuals just
didn’t work.
ADVERTISING
To ramp up marketing, Noah targeted small to medium-size bloggers who wrote for Mint’s
target user base. For example, Noah reached out to Paulstamatiou.com (a geek interest
and productivity blogger) asking to sponsor his blog to promote Mint. Because Paul (and
the other bloggers Noah reached out to) were relatively small names, this was a cheap and
effective way to advertise.
To get their attention, Noah simply sent out an email titled, “Can I send you $1000?” In the
body, he would give a quick rundown about Mint, and ask if he could Paypal the blogger
$1000 in exchange for sponsoring the blog.
Noah used badges, like the one to the left, to sponsor targeted blogs in niches he was
interested in. These visual cues acted like special attention flags for Mint and demonstrated
consistent branding across many different blogs.
He also segmented potential users. If someone signed up and they wanted VIP access to
Mint, they would complete several surveys and be asked to place the small badge on their
site. This gave Mint an SEO boost, while simultaneously creating strong referral channels.
The segmenting tactic was responsible for tens of thousands of signups, and the VIPs who
answered survey questions allowed Mint to position themselves perfectly in regards to their
power user base.
SOCIAL MEDIA
Early on, Noah spent four hours a day doing MySpace / Facebook guerilla marketing for
female demographics and message boards. Mint also leveraged Facebook to start
meaningful conversations with their customers. The Facebook page ran contests, shared user
tips about saving money, and incentivized fans to share Mint with their friends. Leveraging
these social networks, especially in their less crowded early stages, allowed users to have
positive engagements with the Mint brand and contributed to growth.
With Mint, Noah created a timeline for each launch (Alpha, Beta, and Public). He tied this
timeline into outcomes for the business, which allowed for flexibility if changes were necessary.
As you can see, Noah had figured out early on what he had to do in order to get 100,000
users within six months. Then, working backwards from that number, he came up with a plan
to hit several of the marketing channels he found earlier. Because he figured out the user
numbers he needed, he was able to design his launch plan around those numbers, and left
room to re-evaluate and change things after launch.
Thanks to this quant-based approach, Noah guaranteed that Mint’s marketing would succeed
by securing his important marketing channels earlier. The Mint launch was structured to get
customer feedback and influencers before going public, then to go big after its debut.
POST-LAUNCH
By now you should have a good understanding of the quant-based marketing approach
Noah used at Mint (and again at AppSumo) to guarantee his success. As you saw, he created
an extensive plan and conducted a lot of research to ensure that Mint would succeed. Now
let’s talk about the actual process of marketing something post-launch. Mint acquired over
1.5 million users by doing several things (SEO, PR, social media, email, distribution, content,
etc.) really well after they launched. Below, let’s dive into what Mint did, and figure out how
you can do the same for your company.
For your startup, think of bloggers in your niche that cover new or interesting products – they
are more likely to talk about an exciting product that you’re working on. Next, start contacting
the bloggers on your Targeted Blogs list, completing each of the following steps.
Hey [blogger]
I’m launching [product] that solves [pain points, or talk benefits here]. I’ve been a loyal
reader of [blog] for years now, and thought you might be interested in becoming one of
the first users of a product I’ve been working on for [time] now.
It’s completely free of charge, as I’m only looking for expert feedback and thoughts on
how to improve. If you have any questions, feel free to ask!
Thanks,
[info]
In addition to hiring PR, Noah gave an exclusive to The Wall Street Journal, an interview to
The Scoble Show, and an early review of the product to Online Banking Report.
Here’s how you can get media to pay attention to your product without hiring a PR firm:
 Choose three dream media outlets to get mentioned in
 Find a writer at each source that covers your niche
 Get their name, email, and phone number
 Contact them before you need them – help them first by sending relevant articles or
a new perspective on a topic they cover
 Reach out to them (using the email template provided) for an article when the time is
right
Hey [name],
We’re launching [product], tomorrow at noon EST and [outlet] gets free reign on an
exclusive before then. [one sentence about your product and why it’s important].
[closing]
On top of this, Mint also emailed users when interest rates went up, along with
other relevant financial information. This made the Mint newsletter very valuable,
which led to low unsubscribe rates and allowed Mint to use it occasionally as a marketing
channel.
As part of your email marketing efforts, write a newsletter to send to prospects every month.
For topic ideas, look at the needs and problems your target customers mentioned in the
survey. You also can look at your descriptions of your segmented users – for example, an
“underwater” Mint user would probably like tips on how to pay off debt.
First, draft a list of 12 topics to use each month for newsletters. List in the Action Guide.
Then, write each email that you will send for each month. Be sure to include several
opportunities where customers can share the email with friends, or share the product in
other ways.
DISTRIBUTION (POST-LAUNCH)
Mint’s iPhone app saw a large number of downloads when the app was released in the App
Store. It quickly became the top app in the Finance category, and stayed at the top of the
charts for a long time. Its longevity drove tens of thousands of downloads, and exposed Mint
to a new set of users. Mint also participated in other distribution deals – though hit or miss.
Overall, they were “worth the effort,” according to Jason Putorti.
2. Trust. Next to family and health, personal finance is one of the top three most
sensitive subjects in life, not to mention online. The site was originally called mymint.
com, and Mint’s executive team spent months acquiring the Mint.com domain. This
may seem inconsequential, but would you feel more comfortable entering your bank
details on Wesabe.com or Mint.com?
The capacity to purchase and own a highly sought-after domain like “Mint.com”
showed people that this team had money. They weren’t as likely to steal information
or engage in other scammy tactics. The conciseness of the domain in and of itself
[chase.com, mint.com] signaled legitimacy.
3. User Experience & Design. Similar to the short, premium domain, a highly
optimized user experience and great design also built trust.
Learning these surprising insights enabled Noah and the team to develop the
right messaging, approach and branding to speak the audience’s language. Their
messaging ended up being, “Take back your money.”
5. Education. Dave McClure worked with Noah to architect the content (blogger)
network, which was a huge traffic generator for Mint.com and still is to this day. It
leverages infographics, ideas, interviews, and a wealth of useful information to users
and to Google for SEO juice.
By the time Mint launched, there was an outpouring of interest already built up,
waiting to flood onto the site. Though it wasn’t first-to-market, faced more than a
handful of solid competitors, and still had a long way to go at that point, Mint won in
the end.
In the end, and fortunately, we hit one million users in the first six
months.
How did I make that happen? First off, the product was awesome. That makes marketing less
about “marketing” (whatever that is) and more about educating and sharing with people.
Still, there is always that annoying quote about if a tree falls, blah blah...you know what I
mean.
If your product is not awesome or you don’t believe in it, you’re not going to be able to market
it to anyone. But if you are excited about your product, service, etc, then Mint Marketing will
work for you.
Instead of spending time doing “social media marketing” and flailing around with random
posts throughout the web, use Quant-Based Marketing to guarantee your success before
you start. It also shows you exactly what streams are delivering leads vs. the ones that most
people go after “just because.”
One of my big feeder channels was the Blogger Network that I built to talk about Mint and
share the content we published on our own personal finance blog. This directed organic
traffic to the site. Plus, it showed users that we were a trustworthy place to go for tips on
personal finance, which Mint still is to this day.
In addition, user experience, knowing our customers from customer research, segmentation,
and testing our messaging kept us on track for what we were putting out through the
channels.
There were, as you know, many more details behind the full Mint Marketing Plan.
Now that it’s laid out in front of you, feel free to use what you’ve learned in pieces when it
makes sense. Keep in mind that you can and should come back again and again to the core
Mint Marketing framework every time you launch a new growth phase for your business.
From me and everyone at AppSumo, glad to have you as part of our Sumo family.