When choosing between serving a large community with small products ("pebbles") and taking big enterprise clients ("boulders"), focus on the pebbles first. Building a larger audience and profile creates more leverage, making future deals with boulders more favorable. Big clients are always there; community momentum can be fleeting.

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The popular pursuit of massive user scale is often a trap. For bootstrapped SaaS, a sustainable, multi-million dollar business can be built on a few hundred happy, high-paying customers. This focus reduces support load, churn, and stress, creating a more resilient company.

The world of Fortune 500 executives is a small, interconnected community. Rather than casting a wide marketing net, focus all energy on securing one key 'lighthouse' customer. Over-deliver value for them, even if the deal isn't profitable. Their endorsement and introductions to peers are more effective than any marketing channel.

Avoid pursuing prosumer and enterprise motions simultaneously. The optimal sequence is to first build massive bottoms-up love and brand trust with individual users. This creates internal champions within target companies, providing crucial momentum and turning a cold B2B sale into a pull-based motion.

Pursuing large "whale" customers for early validation is risky because they often come with heavy demands that can derail the product vision. Instead, seek out innovative, mid-level companies who are early adopters. They provide better feedback, and building traction with them opens doors to larger clients later.

Instead of optimizing for profit from day one, focus on creating a massive flow of leads with a low-friction offer. Once you have consistent demand ('flow'), you can then introduce 'friction' (like higher prices or more complex funnels) to monetize that established audience.

Niching down allows you to dominate a small pond with less competition, enabling higher prices and faster learning. Once you're the "biggest guy in a puddle," you use your acquired skills and resources to graduate to a pond, then a lake, and finally the ocean.

Jumping to enterprise sales too early is a common founder mistake. Start in the mid-market where accounts have fewer demands. This allows you to perfect the product, build referenceable customers, and learn what's truly needed to win larger, more complex deals later on.

To prevent a community from becoming a sales-driven failure, consider charging for access. This reframes it as a standalone product with its own P&L, forcing genuine investment and protecting it from the short-term pipeline pressure that corrupts its purpose and value.

When developing new products, focus on perfectly solving a problem for a single user to create a passionate advocate. This is more valuable than building something that elicits a lukewarm response from a large user base. Deep engagement from one trumps shallow engagement from many.

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.'