Mark Fishman
Just as an angel investor provides initial capital for founders, an angel user provides early product feedback and support, often above and beyond what a regular customer would provide.
Angel Users can come in many forms, with varying levels of formality and responsibilities: ambassadors, affiliates, advocates, beta testers, community leads, evangelists… (to just start at the beginning of the alphabet)
The once-sharp line between employee and customer is dissolving. As the evolving Community movement has demonstrated, users can be a key function for growth, marketing, and product support. An angel user might mock up new features, moderate a forum, or even ship their own code. In the case of Farcaster, a technical protocol, angel users can be builders and founders themselves!
Angel users represent an opportunity for startups to learn and build more effectively.
In my earliest days as a User Researcher, I was shocked to learn how little companies were listening to the people using their products. I don’t subscribe to “the customer is always right”, but I do believe that teams are generally under-investing in users as a source of learning and ideation.
There is an art and science to “listening to users” (that’s the craft of user research). But I believe there is an under-explored discipline of working with the earliest adopters of your product.
There is a certain affinity that startups have with their early users. They are willing to experiment, take risks, and explore the problem space.
By the time a larger company is on to its Nth customers, both sides have more to lose, and there are fewer opportunities for meaningfully shaping the product vision.
My experiences as a researcher have made me a more enthusiastic and helpful user; I pride myself on giving helpful feedback. I love being able to share my experiences as a user and also help teams think more strategically about how they continue learning.
In the future, I hope to see more creative and structured ways for founders and angel users to work together. I have some ideas, but that's for another post :)
I sometimes have to remind myself of this as an angel user Feedback is great, but sometimes the best help to founders is to get out of the way (Bonus points if you go out and find those users!)
What’s an angel user?
https://warpcast.com/markfishman/0x4c89fe56
A very cool (and underrated concept) from Mark!
here you go @sdv.eth https://paragraph.xyz/@angeluser/what-is-an-angel-user
Finally got a /firstdraft out explaining what an angel user is 😇 "Just as an angel investor provides initial capital for founders, an angel user provides early product feedback and support, often above and beyond what a regular customer would provide." https://paragraph.xyz/@angeluser/what-is-an-angel-user
I love that! You really stand out as an angel user for Bountycaster :)
Thanks Linda! Appreciate how you’ve been building from the start :)
angel users - i like it!
love your framing here!! one of things I've been noodling on recently is how a project can create incentive alignment with angel users as a simple example, imagine a version of Canny where you get some form of token for engaging / sharing feedback kinda ties into @cdixon.eth's work on "token network effect"
Yes 100% aligned with this thinking Have been noodling on what an angel user platform would look like
sounds like i'm an angel user
Well aligned to the way I see things - this is exactly the mission of @covariance - to allow anyone be an early Angel growth/ BD person for early stage projects , by leveraging their knowledge, trust relationships and experience in helping early stage founders. Looks like a subset of angel user 👍
love this mission! would definitely be interested in connecting to jam about it
Absolutely , let's do it!
Love that, been that for more than a few products on here Framework for ya @usersteen.eth
wen $angel
Ya steen $angel wen