How a content creator got 10 consulting leads in his first week — for free
Nas runs a YouTube channel teaching Claude Code to thousands of developers. When he decided to launch a consulting and mentoring business, he didn't spend weeks setting up a website. He built a landing page with LeadLanding, shared it with his community, and had 10 people register their interest in the first 7 days — without spending a penny.
< 5 min
To build and publish
10
Leads in the first week
$0
Spent to get there
The opportunity, and the problem
Nas — the founder behind Selling with Nas on YouTube — had built an engaged audience of developers interested in Claude Code. His viewers were already asking questions in the comments, DMing him for help, and watching his tutorials multiple times. The demand was clearly there. What he didn't have was a single place to send interested people so they could put their hand up.
He could have spent hours building a custom website, buying a domain, configuring hosting, setting up a form tool, and wiring together a CRM. He'd seen other creators take weeks to get a "coming soon" page live. He didn't want to do any of that — he wanted to know, as quickly as possible, whether people would actually pay for consulting and mentoring.
That's the question LeadLanding is built to answer.
What he built — and how fast
Nas opened LeadLanding, described his consulting service in a few sentences, and let the AI generate a complete landing page. The page included a hero section with his value proposition, a breakdown of what the consulting and mentoring service covers, and a built-in lead capture form — all styled automatically and ready to publish.
He reviewed the generated page, made a couple of edits through the chat editor, then hit Publish. His page was live on a leadlanding.dev subdomain in under five minutes. No domain to buy. No hosting to configure. No form tool to integrate. No separate analytics platform to set up.
His entire setup process
- 1.Described his Claude Code consulting service in a short paragraph
- 2.Reviewed the AI-generated page — hero, sections, and form were all there
- 3.Tweaked the headline and one section via the chat editor
- 4.Hit Publish — page went live instantly
- 5.Copied the link and posted it to his YouTube community
Total time from idea to live page: under 5 minutes
What happened next
Nas shared the link with his YouTube community — no paid ads, no cold outreach, no email list blast. Just a community post and a mention in a video to an audience that already trusted him. Within 7 days, his page had over 34 views and 10 people had submitted the lead capture form to register their interest in his consulting and mentoring service.
A 29% conversion rate in the first week. From a page he built in under five minutes. For free.
He could see the traffic in real time from his LeadLanding dashboard — views trending up after each community post, leads appearing as people submitted the form, and a clear picture of how his page was converting. No Google Analytics to set up. No Zapier to wire. Just the numbers, directly in the dashboard.
Nas's LeadLanding analytics — first 7 days
Real data, unedited
The analytics dashboard showing his first 7 days live — 34 page views, daily average of 4, and a peak of 10 visits on a single day (April 14th) when he shared the link with his community.
Why it worked — and what others can take from it
Speed removed the excuse
The reason most creators and founders never validate their side projects is that 'building the website' feels like a week-long task. When setup takes five minutes, you can't justify waiting. Nas had his page live before he could talk himself out of it.
A warm audience is the distribution
Nas didn't need to figure out how to get traffic. He already had a YouTube community that trusted his expertise on Claude Code. The landing page gave that audience somewhere to go — a single clear call to action instead of a YouTube comment thread.
Built-in forms meant zero friction
There was no separate form tool to set up, no Typeform to embed, no Mailchimp to connect. The form was already there — on the page, styled to match, submissions appearing instantly in his leads dashboard. Every person who visited could register interest in two clicks.
Analytics gave him proof, not assumptions
Ten leads in a week is a concrete result — not a feeling. He could see which day drove the most traffic, how the conversion rate held up, and exactly who had registered. That data is what turns a side project into a real business decision.
The point isn't 10 leads. It's the week.
Ten leads in a week from a free tool isn't a viral growth story. It's something more useful than that — it's a working proof of concept. Nas now knows that people in his audience are interested enough to register. He has names and emails. He can follow up, have conversations, and decide whether to build this into a real service.
Before LeadLanding, this kind of validation required either weeks of website setup or an expensive page builder subscription before you'd proven a single thing. Now it takes five minutes and costs nothing.
If you have an audience — even a small one — and an idea you've been sitting on, this is the fastest way to find out if it's worth pursuing. Build the page. Publish it. Share the link. See what happens.
You don't need a finished product. You just need somewhere to send people.
Follow Nas on YouTube
Nas teaches Claude Code, AI-assisted development, and how to build and sell with modern tools — all on his YouTube channel.
@sellingwithnasWhat idea are you sitting on?
Build your landing page with AI, publish it in one click, and find out if anyone wants what you're building — before you spend months building it.