<summary>😎 Choose a cool name for your project</summary>
<p>
> Choose a name users can easily remember. It must not necessarly includes keywords related to the technology you're using within your project (ex: [bento-starter](https://github.com/kefranabg/bento-starter)).
> README is the first thing your user will see. Make it simple, pretty and easy to read. [Here is a list of beautiful READMEs](https://github.com/matiassingers/awesome-readme).
> Vistors will want to quickly understand the purpose of your project, how it works and how to use it. Providing a demo is the best way to satisfy users. It could be:
- An animated GIF demonstrating how your project works
> Creating a good documentation is probably the most important step. If you have a small documentation, you can directly include it in your README. Otherwise, you should probably host it in a separate website. Projects like [vuepress](https://v1.vuepress.vuejs.org) helps you creating clean documentations in a simple way.
> A minimum amount of stars make your project more trustable than a project with zero star. Ask people you know to support your project before doing a public announcement on social medias.
> Write articles about your project. Purpose can be the technical stack you used, how your project works, problems you encountered, etc. Publish your articles to [medium](https://medium.com/) or [dev.to](https://dev.to/).
> Maintain and improve your project with new releases. Generate changelogs is also a best practice, it allows your users to know about the latest changes.
> A healthy project is a project with a community and contributors. Let your users know that you need help by tagging some issues with `contribution welcome` or `good first issue` labels.
> Be nice with people that helped you! Some open-source projects like [gatsby](https://github.com/gatsbyjs/gatsby) reward contributors with goodies. If you can't afford that, do a public post (on twitter or other platforms) about the contribution and mention the author ([here is an example of tweet](https://twitter.com/FranckAbgrall/status/1139470547492978688)). Open a `Contributors` section in your README to publicly thanks them (ex: [vuepress contributors section](https://github.com/vuejs/vuepress#code-contributors)).