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Don't enter a market just because it's attractive. First, assess if customers will logically accept your company in that space ('permission to play'). Then, confirm you have a route to market and distribution advantage that gives you a 'right to win.'
A founder's primary job is to place the company in a large, nascent market with massive potential. It is far easier to iteratively build the right product within a great market than it is to try and iterate your way into a better market. The market choice comes first.
When launching into a competitive space, first build the table-stakes features to achieve parity. Then, develop at least one "binary differentiator"—a unique, compelling capability that solves a major pain point your competitors don't, making the choice clear for customers.
The process of building a business must start with identifying the ideal customer. The product, offer, messaging, and channels should all be reverse-engineered from that initial choice. Delaying this decision limits leverage and leads to wasted effort on a mismatched offer.
Never start a business without first validating demand by securing commitments from at least three initial clients. This strategy ensures immediate revenue and proves product-market fit from day one, avoiding the common trap of building a service that nobody wants to buy.
Spend significant time debating and mapping out a project's feasibility with a trusted group before starting to build. This internal stress-test is crucial for de-risking massive undertakings by ensuring there's a clear, plausible path to the end goal.
Before launching, assess a product's viability by the sheer number of potential distribution points. Manufacturing and logistics are solvable problems if the market access is vast. This reverses the typical product-first approach by prioritizing market penetration from day one.
Obsessing over creating a new market category is often a mistake. Data shows the vast majority of successful public tech companies compete within established categories. It's more effective to get "invited to the party" by using a known category label and then winning with a sharp, differentiated value proposition.
Contrary to seeking 'blue ocean' opportunities, founder Donald Spann's strategy is to enter markets that already have competition. This approach validates that the service is necessary and has existing demand, reducing market risk. Success then comes from superior execution and differentiation.
A visionary founder must be willing to shelve their ultimate, long-term product vision if the market isn't ready. The pragmatic approach is to pivot to an immediate, tangible customer problem. This builds a foundational business and necessary ecosystem trust, paving the way to realize the grander vision in the future.
Validate market demand by securing payment from customers before investing significant resources in building anything. This applies to software, hardware, and services, completely eliminating the risk of creating something nobody wants to buy.