Grow on AgentDukaan · Intermediate · 6 min read
A hands-on playbook for sellers to reach their first 100 buyers: sell don't market, find your audience, non-spam outreach, referrals, conten
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Getting Your First 100 Customers
Your first 100 customers don't come from a clever ad or a viral post. They come from you, personally, talking to people who have the exact problem your agent solves. This guide is the unglamorous, high-conversion playbook for going from zero to a hundred paying buyers, written for AgentDukaan sellers who already have an agent worth selling.
Why the first 100 are sold, not marketed
Marketing is leverage applied to a message that already converts. Before you have 100 customers, you don't yet know what that message is — which pain point lands, which objection kills the deal, what price feels fair. Spending on ads now just buys you expensive silence.
So the first 100 are sold by hand. That's a feature, not a punishment. Every manual sale teaches you something: the WhatsApp reply that finally got a "haan, bhej do," the demo step where people's eyes light up, the five words that make a CA understand why a GST-reminder agent is worth ₹499/month. By customer 100 you'll have a script that converts, testimonials that are real, and a clear sense of who your buyer actually is. That is what you eventually pour ad spend into.
Set a concrete target: 3-4 conversations a day, 5 days a week. That's ~80 conversations a month. At a modest 15-20% close rate on a warm, well-targeted list, the first 100 is a 6-10 week project, not a miracle.
Finding where your buyers already hang out
You don't need to build an audience. You need to find one that already exists and show up where it gathers. Start by writing one sentence: "My agent helps [specific person] do [specific job] so they can [specific outcome]." The more specific, the easier the next step.
Then map where that person already spends attention:
| Buyer type | Where they gather | How to show up |
|---|---|---|
| Small e-commerce / D2C founders | Instagram, WhatsApp seller groups, Shiprocket/Dukaan communities | Reply to "how do you handle support?" threads with a real answer |
| CAs, tax consultants, bookkeepers | ICAI forums, LinkedIn, district CA WhatsApp groups | Share a GST-deadline checklist, mention the agent as a footnote |
| Real-estate / coaching / clinic owners | Local Facebook groups, Justdial, referral WhatsApp circles | Offer a free 1:1 setup of a lead-reply agent |
| Indie devs / no-code builders | r/india startups, Indie Hackers, X (Twitter), Telegram dev groups | Post a teardown of how you built it |
Pick two channels, not eight. Depth beats spread. Spend a week reading before you post a word — learn the group's language, its rules, and what gets people upvoted versus banned. The fastest way to lose your first 100 is to get kicked from the one group where they all live.
Cold outreach that is not spam
Spam is generic, self-centred, and asks for something. Good outreach is specific, useful, and earns the reply. The test: could you have sent this exact message to anyone else? If yes, rewrite it.
Three rules: research one real detail about them, lead with their problem not your product, and make the first ask tiny (a yes/no, not a meeting). On WhatsApp keep it to phone-screen length and never open with a brochure.
WhatsApp / Telegram first-touch (Hinglish-friendly):
Hi Rahul — saw your store does same-day delivery in Pune, solid. Quick one: how are you handling order-status questions on WhatsApp right now? Built a small agent that auto-answers those 24x7. Want me to send a 30-sec demo? No pressure either way.
Email cold outreach (B2B, e.g. a CA):
Subject: GST deadline reminders for your clients — auto
Hi Meera, I noticed Sharma & Co handles ~40 SME clients. The agent I built sends each client an automated GST/TDS deadline nudge on WhatsApp, so you stop chasing. ₹999/month, set up in a day. Worth a 2-line reply if you'd like a quick demo? If not, ignore this — won't follow up more than once.
Note what these do: a real detail, the buyer's pain first, a tiny ask, and a built-in exit. Always honour "won't follow up more than once" — under the DPDP Act and basic decency, respecting a no protects your reputation in tight Indian professional circles where word travels fast. For a deeper library of message blocks, see 40 WhatsApp Customer-Support Prompts (Copy-Paste).
Use AI to personalise at speed without going generic:
You are helping me write a short, non-spammy WhatsApp outreach message.
My agent: [one-line description of what it does and the outcome]
Price: [₹X/month]
The person I'm messaging: [name, business, one real detail I noticed]
Write a message under 45 words that:
- opens with the real detail about them
- names their likely problem before my product
- ends with a tiny yes/no ask and a no-pressure exit
- sounds like a human Indian founder, light Hinglish ok, no emojis spam
Give me 2 variations.
Turning one customer into three
A happy customer is your cheapest acquisition channel — but only if you ask, and only if you ask at the right moment. The right moment is the first win: the day they see their agent reply to a real customer, save them an hour, or close a lead. That's when delight is highest and the referral ask feels natural.
Make referring effortless:
- Ask specifically. Not "know anyone?" but "You mentioned your friend runs a similar clinic — mind intro-ing me on WhatsApp? I'll set theirs up free." A named ask converts; a vague one evaporates.
- Give them something to forward. A 20-second screen recording of the agent working, plus one line they can copy-paste. People share what's already share-shaped.
- Reward both sides. "One month free for you, 20% off their first month." Keep it simple enough to explain in a single sentence.
- Productise the loop. After every win, send a one-tap message: "Glad it's working! If you know one other person this'd help, here's a forward-ready note 👇"
Track it crudely in a sheet: who referred whom. When you spot your top referrers, treat them like gold — early access, a thank-you call, their logo on your listing.
Content and communities that compound
Outreach is linear; content is compounding. You won't see results in week one, but a post that ranks or a community answer that gets bookmarked keeps pulling in buyers for months. The trick at this stage is to write from your sales conversations, not from imagination — every objection you hear is a piece of content.
What actually works pre-100:
- Teardowns and build-in-public posts. "I built a WhatsApp agent that answers order-status questions — here's exactly how" earns trust because it's useful even to people who'll never buy. Pair with Build Your First AI Agent: Idea to Live in a Weekend for the technical backbone.
- Answer-first community presence. Be the person who gives the genuinely helpful reply in that one CA or D2C group. Mention your agent only when it's directly relevant. Reputation first, links later.
- One repeatable content asset. A weekly "deadline this week" post, a monthly teardown — consistency beats brilliance. For prompt-driven content at speed, see The Content & Social Media Prompt Pack.
You don't need a blog or a YouTube channel yet. One channel, posted to consistently, tied directly to the buyers you mapped earlier.
A 30-day first-100 plan
This is a realistic ramp, not a promise of exactly 100 in 30 days — it's the system that gets you there over 6-10 weeks.
| Week | Focus | Daily actions | Goal |
|---|---|---|---|
| Week 1 | Sharpen + listen | Write your one-sentence buyer; join 2 communities; read, don't post; polish your listing page | Crisp positioning, 2 channels chosen |
| Week 2 | Outreach engine | 3-4 personalised messages/day; book demos; log every reply | First 5-10 customers |
| Week 3 | Referrals + content | Ask every happy buyer for 1 intro; publish 2 teardown posts | Referral loop live, content started |
| Week 4 | Double down | Cut the weak channel; 5 messages/day on the winner; collect testimonials | Repeatable 20+/week pipeline |
Checklist before you send a single message:
- Your listing page has a clear outcome, price, and one demo video
- You can describe your buyer in one sentence
- You've picked exactly two channels and read the rules of each
- You have a 30-second demo recording ready to forward
- Your outreach passes the "could I send this to anyone?" test (it shouldn't)
- You have a simple sheet to log conversations and referrals
Next steps
- Today: write your one-sentence buyer description and pin it above your desk.
- This week: join two communities where that buyer already hangs out, and send your first three personalised messages using the templates above.
- After your first sale: ask for one named referral the same day, while the win is fresh.
If your listing isn't yet razor-sharp on outcome and price, tighten it with How to Price Your AI Agent — and when you're ready to put it in front of buyers, the seller page walks you through going live. No rush; get the first conversation right, and the rest compounds.