Get your free personalized podcast brief

We scan new podcasts and send you the top 5 insights daily.

To compete with giants like Amazon, Spangle didn't build a full platform. They found a niche "connector" problem: the loss of context between an Instagram ad and the e-commerce site. This focused wedge delivered immediate value that incumbents had overlooked, creating a crucial entry point.

Related Insights

Large companies often focus R&D on high-ticket items, neglecting smaller accessory categories. This creates a market gap for focused startups to innovate and solve specific problems that bigger players overlook, allowing them to build a defensible niche.

Before becoming massive platforms, many successful companies started with a narrow focus. Instagram was for bourbon drinkers, Amazon for used books, and Facebook for Harvard students. This strategy built a loyal early user base and refined their product before expanding to a broader market.

A competitor may have a "better" product on paper, but buyers' demand is nuanced. A founder can win a deal against a well-funded rival by discovering the buyer's primary need is industry expertise, not more features. By aligning with this deeper "pull," the competitor's strengths become irrelevant.

Instead of a broad launch, Everflow targeted only mobile affiliate networks—a small market they knew deeply from their previous company. This allowed them to build very specific, high-value features for that ICP, win deals, and establish a strong beachhead before expanding into larger, adjacent markets.

Instead of competing with billion-dollar platforms, use tools like Firecrawl to build hyper-specialized solutions for a single vertical (e.g., SEO for dentists, job boards for AI engineers). These focused products can win by offering superior relevance and solving one user's problem perfectly.

Despite the dominance of large AI labs, they face constraints in compute, talent, and focus. Startups can thrive by building highly specialized products for verticals the big players deem too niche. This focused approach allows them to build better interfaces and achieve deeper market penetration where giants won't prioritize competing.

Well-funded startups are pressured by investors to target large markets. This strategic constraint allows bootstrapped founders to outmaneuver them by focusing on and dominating a specific niche that is too small for the venture-backed competitor to justify.

Superhuman successfully challenged Google by targeting a high-value niche. Founder Raul Vora notes that giants like Google are forced to abandon successful products (like Inbox with 500M users) if they don't achieve "Google scale," creating massive opportunities for focused startups to thrive.

Nominal followed Peter Thiel's advice by first targeting the small, acutely painful problem of post-test data review. By building a 10x better solution for this specific niche, they established a strong beachhead from which they could then credibly expand into adjacent markets like manufacturing and fleet operations.

Monaco's strategy is to be purpose-built for early-stage startups. This allows them to bundle multiple tools into a simpler, more intuitive platform. They avoid the deep but complex functionality of incumbents like Salesforce, which often works against smaller companies that need speed and simplicity, not feature bloat.