To solve low adoption for its government services app, Irembo targeted a niche audience (car owners) with a high-frequency need (checking for traffic fines). This recurring use case provided a compelling reason for users to download and retain the app, creating opportunities to expose them to less frequent services.
Standard digital onboarding fails in markets with low digital literacy. Remedial Health drove a 32% adoption increase by replacing typical in-app guides with hands-on user training and localizing their app into regional languages, directly addressing user capabilities and cultural context.
Instead of inventing new features, Prepared identified its most lucrative expansion opportunity by seeing users' painful workarounds. They noticed 911 dispatchers manually copy-pasting foreign language texts into Google Translate—a clear signal of a high-value problem they could solve directly.
The weeks following a launch are for intense learning, not just promotion. The goal is to quickly identify high-adopting customer segments and then execute mini 'relaunches' with tailored messaging specifically for them, maximizing impact and conversion.
A company with modest growth experimented with niche content for a small user segment, revealing a massive, underserved market. This led to a second, separate app that quickly surpassed the original product's revenue and drove hyper-growth, challenging the "focus on one thing" dogma.
Don't fight battles you can't win. For a product like Evernote, competing with free, pre-installed apps like Apple Notes for casual users is a losing proposition. The winning strategy is to focus on the advanced user segment whose complex needs justify paying for a more powerful tool.
Figma learned that removing issues preventing users from adopting the product was as important as adding new features. They systematically tackled these blockers—often table stakes features—and saw a direct, measurable improvement in retention and activation after fixing each one.
For specialized products, user motivation is more critical than age or location. Focusing on the user's mindset, life stage, and readiness for change (psychographics) can lead to significantly higher engagement and retention than targeting a broad demographic group that may not be ready for the solution.
Many founders fail not from a lack of market opportunity, but from trying to serve too many customer types with too many offerings. This creates overwhelming complexity in marketing, sales, and product. Picking a narrow niche simplifies operations and creates a clearer path to traction and profitability.