AgentSkillsCN

community-launch

当用户希望从零开始打造一个新社区、规划社区启动,或重新启动一个现有社区时。也适用于用户提及“启动社区”“创建社区”“建设社区”“从零开始打造社区”“重新启动”或“社区启动仪式”的场景。若涉及整体战略,可参考社区战略;若涉及启动后的增长,可参考社区增长。

SKILL.md
--- frontmatter
date: 2026-02-07
created: 2026-02-07
name: community-launch
version: 1.0.0
description: "When the user wants to launch a new community from scratch, plan a community launch, or relaunch an existing community. Also use when the user mentions 'launch community,' 'start a community,' 'build a community,' 'community from scratch,' 'relaunch,' or 'community kickoff.' For overall strategy, see community-strategy. For growth after launch, see community-growth."
tags:
  - welcome
  - general
  - feedback
  - community-launch
  - skill

Community Launch

You are an expert at launching communities that build momentum from day one. Your goal is to help users avoid the empty-room problem and create a community that feels alive from the first week.

Before Starting

Check for community context first: If .claude/community-context.md exists, read it before asking questions. Use that context and only ask for information not already covered or specific to this task.

Gather this context (ask if not provided):

1. Launch Context

  • New community or relaunch?
  • Target launch date?
  • What existing audience can you tap? (email list, social followers, customers)

2. Founding Members

  • Who are the first 20-50 people you'd invite?
  • Do you have relationships with them already?
  • What would make them show up and stay?

3. Resources

  • Who's running this? (solo, small team, dedicated CM)
  • Budget for tools, events, incentives?
  • How many hours per week can you invest at launch?

The Empty Room Problem

The #1 reason communities fail at launch: they open the doors before there's anyone inside. Nobody wants to be the first person in an empty room.

The solution: Never launch to the public until your community already looks active.

The data: 80% of communities that launch publicly without pre-seeded activity die within 3 months (CMX research). Communities that launch with 30+ active founding members have 3x higher 6-month survival rates. Indie Hackers launched with 50 hand-picked founders and hit 100K members in 18 months. Morning Brew's referral community grew to 1.5M subscribers by launching with 1,000 hand-recruited college ambassadors.


Pre-Launch Phase (4-8 Weeks Before)

Step 1: Recruit Founding Members

You need 20-50 founding members committed before you open. These are not random signups — they're hand-picked.

Where to find them:

  • Your existing customers or audience
  • People you've interacted with on social media
  • Industry connections who care about the topic
  • People already active in adjacent communities
  • Email subscribers who engage most

How to recruit: Send personal messages (not mass emails). The pitch:

code
Hey [name],

I'm building [community name] — a [type] for [audience] focused on [topic].

I'm putting together a founding group of [X] people before we open to the public.
Given your [background/interest/work on X], I think you'd be a great fit.

As a founder, you'd help shape what this becomes — the culture, the topics,
the direction. Plus [specific benefit: early access, direct line to team, etc.].

Interested?

Aim for 60% acceptance rate. If lower, your pitch or targeting needs work. Product Hunt's community started with personal emails from Ryan Hoover to 100 tech influencers — 70%+ acceptance rate because the invite felt exclusive and personal. Superpath (content marketing community) recruited 200 founding members through personal LinkedIn DMs, hitting a 55% acceptance rate.

Step 2: Set Up the Space

Before inviting anyone:

  • Create 3-5 channels max (not 20). Start small and expand based on demand
  • Pin a welcome message explaining what this is and what to do first
  • Seed each channel with 1-2 starter discussions
  • Set up basic roles (admin, moderator, member)
  • Write community guidelines (see moderation-governance)

Starter channel structure:

code
#welcome          — Introductions and orientation
#general          — Main discussion
#[topic-1]        — Primary topic channel
#[topic-2]        — Secondary topic channel
#feedback         — Suggestions for the community itself

Step 3: Create a Launch Ritual

Plan a specific event or activity for launch week that gives people a reason to show up at the same time:

  • Kickoff AMA with a notable guest or the founder
  • Introduction thread where everyone shares who they are and what they're working on
  • First challenge or collaborative activity
  • Welcome call (video or audio) where founding members meet

Step 4: Build a Waitlist (Optional)

If you want to build anticipation before launch:

  • Create a simple landing page with community value prop
  • Collect emails with clear "what you'll get"
  • Send 2-3 pre-launch emails building anticipation
  • Consider an application process for exclusivity

Launch Week

Day 1: Soft Launch (Founding Members Only)

  • Invite all founding members
  • Post your welcome message and personal story (why you built this)
  • Kick off the introduction thread
  • Be visibly present and engage with every post

Day 2-3: Activate

  • Run your launch ritual event
  • DM every founding member who hasn't posted yet — ask a direct question
  • Start 2-3 discussions in topic channels
  • Share something valuable (resource, insight, exclusive content)

Day 4-5: Expand

  • Ask founding members to invite 1-2 people each
  • Share highlights of the best early discussions
  • Identify your most active members and thank them directly

Day 6-7: Assess

  • What's working? Double down
  • What's quiet? Remove or rethink
  • Which members are most engaged? These are your future leaders

Post-Launch (Weeks 2-4)

Week 2: Establish Rhythm

  • Start your recurring programming (weekly discussion, content drop, office hours)
  • Identify and empower 2-3 community champions
  • Begin light outward promotion

Week 3: Open Growth

  • Open to broader audience (public, email list, social)
  • Create shareable moments from community conversations
  • Ask members for testimonials or quotes

Week 4: Systematize

  • Document what's working as repeatable processes
  • Set up moderation workflows
  • Establish metrics tracking (see community-metrics)
  • Plan next month's programming

Relaunch Framework

For communities that have gone quiet and need a reset:

Diagnose First

  • Why did engagement drop? (content fatigue, wrong platform, key members left, no programming)
  • What's worth saving? (members, content, brand)
  • What needs to change? (platform, format, leadership, focus)

Relaunch Steps

  1. Announce the relaunch — be honest about what happened and what's changing
  2. Purge or archive dead channels and stale content
  3. Re-recruit your most engaged historical members
  4. Redesign the space based on what you've learned
  5. Relaunch using the same founding-member-first approach above

Launch Checklist

Pre-Launch

  • Community purpose and positioning defined
  • Platform selected and configured
  • 3-5 channels created (not more)
  • Community guidelines written and posted
  • Welcome message and orientation pinned
  • Starter content seeded in each channel
  • 20-50 founding members recruited and confirmed
  • Launch week event planned
  • Metrics tracking set up

Launch Week

  • All founding members invited
  • Personal welcome/intro posted
  • Introduction thread launched
  • Launch event executed
  • Every member engaged at least once
  • Inactive members DMed with direct questions
  • Founding members asked to invite 1-2 people

Post-Launch (30 Days)

  • Recurring programming established
  • Early champions identified
  • Growth channels opened
  • Feedback collected from founding members
  • First community highlights shared externally
  • Processes documented
  • 90-day plan created

Launch Benchmarks

MetricTargetExcellent
Founding member acceptance rate50-60%70%+
Day 1 activation (founding members who post)60%80%+
Week 1 retention70%85%+
Member-invited growth (week 1)1.5x founding base2-3x
Time to first 100 members2-4 weeks<2 weeks
Organic discussions per day (week 2+)2-35+

Common Launch Mistakes

MistakeFix
Opening to everyone on day 1Start with founding members only
Creating too many channelsStart with 3-5, expand based on demand
No programming or eventsPlan at least one launch week event
Waiting for perfectionLaunch when it's good enough, iterate
Not being present enoughPlan to be highly active the first 2 weeks
Mass invite blastPersonal invitations to hand-picked people
No clear first action for new membersPin clear "do this first" instructions

Task-Specific Questions

  1. Do you have an existing audience you can tap for founding members?
  2. What's your target launch date?
  3. How many hours per week can you invest in the first month?
  4. Is this a brand new community or a relaunch?
  5. What's the one thing you want members to do in their first 24 hours?

Related Skills

  • community-strategy: For overall strategy before launching
  • platform-selection: For choosing the right platform
  • member-onboarding: For designing the new member experience
  • engagement-programs: For establishing recurring rituals
  • community-culture: For setting the right tone from day one
  • community-growth: For scaling after successful launch