Founders often try to fix their pricing or model when faced with inconsistent results. However, the real problem is usually a lack of volume. Sporadic outcomes are a symptom of not doing enough outreach. The solution isn't to tweak the model, but to 5x or 10x the promotional activity.

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When a business gets high visibility but low conversions, the impulse is to blame the platform or marketing tactic (the 'sink'). However, the real issue is often the core offering—the product, pricing, or value proposition (the 'well'). People obsess over front-end fixes when the back-end is the actual problem.

When facing a do-or-die situation like running out of funding, resist the urge to find novel solutions. Instead, identify your highest-probability acquisition channel (e.g., grant applications) and apply an unreasonable amount of volume to it to guarantee success through sheer effort.

If your sales efforts feel volatile or based on luck, it's likely because you aren't doing enough outreach. What seems like random success at low volume becomes a predictable process at high volume. A 1% cold call conversion rate isn't luck; it's a metric you can scale.

Early-stage founders, especially those who are analytically minded, must resist the comfort of spreadsheets and data. The most crucial activity is direct engagement and selling, even if it feels uncomfortable. No amount of analysis can replace the impact of the founder personally championing the product.

When founders claim a proven but labor-intensive channel 'doesn't scale,' they often misdiagnose a resourcing problem. The bottleneck isn't the channel's viability but their inability to solve the operational challenge of hiring, training, and managing a team to execute that channel at massive volume.

Technical founders often mistakenly believe the best product wins. In reality, marketing and sales acumen are more critical for success. Many multi-million dollar companies have succeeded with products considered clunky or complex, purely through superior distribution and sales execution.

At a small company, one or two big deals can significantly inflate the average productivity per rep. This hides the fact that the majority of the team may be underperforming. As the team grows and these outliers have less impact, the true, often flatlining, productivity of the sales force is exposed.

Instead of striving for the perfect strategy from the start, commit to massive, imperfect action. The inherent pain and inefficiency of doing high volume with low output will naturally force you to learn, adapt, and optimize your process much faster than theoretical planning.

When entrepreneurs fail to scale, they often blame a saturated market. In reality, they've likely only reached a tiny fraction of potential customers. The real issue is their inability to advertise effectively to audiences with different levels of problem and solution awareness.

Founders often attribute early sales success to luck, making the process feel erratic and unscalable. Reframe this: if 100 cold calls yield one client, that's a predictable process, not a fluke. The feeling of volatility is a direct result of not doing enough outreach to smooth out the conversion rate into a reliable metric.

Insufficient Volume, Not a Flawed Model, Is the Root Cause of Startup Volatility | RiffOn