Content types - product pages, discussions, blogs

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Your team treats every channel the same: one announcement, one link, one image, posted everywhere. On Product Hunt, that approach wastes half the tools available. A launch page needs different copy than a discussion thread or a long-form post.

Product Hunt content types exist because the community uses the site for more than daily launches. Product pages showcase what you ship. Discussions host questions and debates. Blog posts share deeper stories when the platform supports them for your account. This chapter maps each format, what it is for, and how it connects to your launch plan. Here is how it works.

What is a Product Hunt product page?

A product page is the main listing for something you launch. It includes your name, tagline, description, gallery, link, and comment thread. Launch day traffic lands here first. Voters upvote the page, and the thread becomes your public support channel for the day.

Product pages stay live after launch. Past visitors find them through search, your profile, or links you share months later. Treat the description and gallery as durable assets, not throwaway launch copy.

One launch usually equals one primary product page for that release. Major versions may warrant a new submission when the story is big enough. Small fixes belong in comments or on your own site instead of repeated submissions.

When should you use discussions?

Discussions are text posts where makers and the community talk about a topic, ask for advice, or share lessons. They do not replace a product launch, but they build presence before and after launch day.

Use discussions when you want feedback on positioning, pricing, or naming without submitting a full product. Use them to share a postmortem after launch or to ask what feature matters most to users. Genuine questions earn better replies than thinly disguised ads.

Active discussion history makes your profile look engaged. Pair that habit with building community on Product Hunt for a long-term plan beyond a single spike.

How do blog posts fit on Product Hunt?

Blog-style posts on Product Hunt let makers share longer stories: why you built something, what you learned, or how you solved a specific problem. Availability can depend on account features and platform updates, but the intent is consistent: depth over a headline.

Blogs work well after launch when you have results to share. A honest recap of sign-ups, surprises, and mistakes helps other makers and keeps your audience warm. Link to your product page instead of repeating the full pitch.

Long posts should still respect the reader's time. Clear headings, short paragraphs, and one takeaway per section match how people read on the site. For broader storytelling skills, see introduction to Product Hunt and your own site blog for content you fully control.

How do you choose the right format?

Launching something new: product page first, with comments ready. Seeking advice before you ship: discussion. Sharing lessons after launch: blog or discussion recap.

Match each format to one goal. A product page should drive trials or sales. A discussion should invite replies. A blog should teach or reflect. Mixing all three goals in one post usually weakens each.

Next, sharpen how your product page looks in visual strategy: screenshots and thumbnails, then plan timing in Product Hunt launch strategy.

Frequently asked questions

Can you run a discussion and a product launch the same week?

Should product descriptions match your website copy?

Where should long tutorials live?

Do discussions help SEO outside Product Hunt?

Can you edit a product page after launch?

What content type builds presence before a first launch?