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7 Free Ways to Market Your Digital Product

By Dan9 min read

Affiliate Disclosure: This post contains affiliate links. If you sign up for MadeThis through my link, I earn a commission at no extra cost to you. I only recommend products I personally use and believe in.

7 Free Ways to Market Your Digital Product

I've never run a paid ad campaign for my digital products.

Every sale I've made has come from free traffic — search, social, community, or email. And I've made a lot of sales.

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This isn't because paid advertising doesn't work. It's because free traffic, done right, compounds. You don't pay for it forever. A blog post you wrote in month 3 can still drive sales in year 3.

Here are the 7 free marketing strategies I'd use if I were starting a digital product business from zero today.

1. SEO Blog Content

This is the backbone of my marketing strategy, and I'd argue it's the highest-ROI free channel for digital product creators.

The mechanics:

  • Write a blog post targeting a keyword your ideal buyer searches for
  • Make the post genuinely useful — actually solve the problem or answer the question
  • Mention your product naturally as a tool or resource
  • Include a soft CTA at the end

Google does the distribution work. A post that ranks for "how to create a content calendar" can send hundreds of visitors to your site per month — indefinitely — without you doing anything after publishing.

It takes 3–6 months to see meaningful SEO traffic from a new blog. But the compound effect means what you build today pays off for years.

2. Pinterest

Pinterest is a search engine that most digital product creators underutilize.

Unlike Instagram or TikTok where content disappears in 24–48 hours, Pinterest pins can surface in searches for months or years after you publish them. A pin you create today might get repinned 200 times 18 months from now.

Create 3–5 pins for each product or blog post. Use:

  • Clean, readable design (bright background, clear title text)
  • Keyword-rich pin descriptions
  • A direct link to your product page or blog post

Pinterest has driven more traffic to my store than any social platform. And it works even for completely new accounts.

3. Reddit and Online Communities

Reddit, Facebook groups, Discord servers, Slack communities — wherever your target buyers hang out, that's where you can get early visibility.

The wrong way: posting "check out my new product!" in every relevant group.

The right way: become a genuinely helpful participant first. Answer questions. Share insights. Give freely. Then, when it's natural, mention your product in the context of helping someone.

Communities are also incredible for research. You'll learn exactly what problems your target buyers are struggling with, which makes your product and marketing sharper.

4. Email Marketing

An email list is the most valuable marketing asset you can own — because no algorithm controls who sees it.

Even a small list of 100 people who are genuinely interested in your niche is more valuable than 10,000 passive social followers.

To build it:

  • Create a lead magnet (a free checklist, mini-guide, or template)
  • Offer it in exchange for an email address
  • Put the opt-in form on your product page and blog
  • Send helpful emails regularly — not just sales messages

When you have a new product or a sale, email your list. Even a 20% open rate on a 200-person list is 40 real people who know and trust you receiving your message.

5. Twitter/X Threads

Long-form threads on Twitter/X can drive significant traffic when they provide genuine value.

The format: share a process, a breakdown, a framework, or a story in 10–15 tweet thread format. End the thread with a mention of your product as a related resource.

Good threads get retweeted and shared. Even a thread with 200 impressions can result in 10–20 visitors to your store if it's relevant enough.

The key: make the thread valuable on its own. Don't write 15 tweets building to a pitch. Write 15 tweets that teach something, and then mention the product organically at the end.

6. YouTube

You don't need a polished channel to drive traffic from YouTube. You need one good video targeting a keyword your buyer searches.

Screen recordings, tutorials, walkthroughs, breakdowns — these formats don't require any on-camera presence and they consistently rank in YouTube search.

A 5-minute video showing someone how to solve the problem your product addresses, with a link to your product in the description, can drive targeted traffic for years.

7. Guest Posts and Collaborations

If you can write a useful article for someone else's blog or newsletter, you get exposure to their audience for free.

Look for:

  • Blogs that serve your target audience
  • Newsletters in your niche
  • Podcast hosts who take guests (audio format if that works for you)

Reach out with a specific topic idea that would be valuable to their readers. Most small-to-medium publishers are open to good guest content because it fills their content pipeline.

The ask is simple: "I'd love to write a post for your readers about [topic]. I'll include a brief bio and link to my product — no forced promotion, just a mention in the bio."


Where to Start

If I had to pick just two of these to start with tomorrow:

1. Write one SEO blog post targeting a keyword your buyer searches, mentioning your product naturally.

2. Create 5 Pinterest pins pointing to that post or your product page.

Those two actions compound the longest, work without ongoing daily effort, and don't require any existing audience.

The other channels layer in naturally as you build. Start where the leverage is highest.

And make sure your product is on a platform that handles checkout and delivery cleanly, so when traffic does come, it converts. I use MadeThis.com — nothing worse than driving free traffic to a store that creates friction at checkout.

If you're ready to build, I'd start at MadeThis.com.

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