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Continuously building and launching new products works best when each one targets the same audience and solves a related problem. This strategy creates a compounding effect, making your audience and influence grow with each launch, rather than starting from scratch every time.
Founders often believe new products are needed to break through revenue plateaus. However, consistent growth comes from aligning the core systems of messaging, offer, and lead generation. This compounds effort on what already exists rather than requiring you to start over.
New brands should resist targeting a broad audience. Instead, focus on a specific niche (e.g., Hyrox athletes for a health device) where the product's value is clearly demonstrable. This builds a strong story and credibility that can be leveraged for future expansion into other markets.
The key to effective portfolio entrepreneurship isn't random diversification. It's about serving the same customer segment across multiple products. This creates a cohesive ecosystem where each new offering benefits from compounding knowledge and trust, making many things feel like one thing.
Reverse the traditional startup model by first building an audience with compelling content. Then, nurture that audience into a community. Finally, develop a product that solves the community's specific, identified needs. This framework significantly increases the probability of finding product-market fit.
To scale effectively, resist complexity by using the 'Scaling Credo' framework. It mandates radical focus: pick one target market, one product, one customer acquisition channel, and one conversion tool. Stick to this combination for one full year before adding anything new.
Counterintuitively, imposing strict constraints fuels rapid growth. The "Scaling Credo" dictates focusing on one target market, one product, one conversion tool, and one traffic channel for an entire year. This eliminates distraction and forces deep mastery, which is what truly scales a business.
Gary Vaynerchuk's advice is to go multi-platform immediately, even with imperfect content, to leverage compounding effects. The initial quality is less important than establishing presence and momentum across all relevant channels from day one.
Instead of broad, undifferentiated marketing, Threads' growth playbook involves systematically targeting and "blitzing" specific interest verticals one at a time. They combine tailored product features and go-to-market efforts to win communities like Formula 1 or reality TV before moving to the next.
Identify content formats or topics that consistently drive follower growth—your 'gold strikes'. Dedicate a portion of your output (e.g., one of three daily posts) to replicating these successes. Use the remaining capacity to experiment and discover the next high-performing format, creating a continuous growth loop.
The best strategy is to capture a large share of a small, specific market and then expand into adjacent ones. Jeff Bezos deliberately started with books for a niche customer base, proving the model before scaling to become 'the everything store.'