Many of us tech folks are overflowing with business ideas, from local solutions to our close circles’ problems to ambitious global-scale projects. But it’s also accompanied by an infinite uncertainty that blocks us from making the first step. Knowing that 9 out of 10 startups eventually die (more depending on the look-back window), it’s pretty easy to stay frustrated and never act.
My name is Dmitrii, and I have been building tech products for almost 10 years in a C-level corporate position and as a startup co-founder. I’ve launched and scaled products in EdTech and eCommerce and multiple regions and countries, including, but not limited to, Russia, Ukraine, Kazakhstan, Brazil, Mexico, Israel and the United States. And I’ve managed to collect failures and successes in most of them.
I will share my perspective on how you can structure and assess your ideas to focus on the most promising scenarios, hopefully giving you an increased chance to avoid repeating my mistakes.
Please consider that it’s not scientific research, and most items are simplified for easier perception. It’s tailored with VC-model startups in mind and primarily focuses on B2C products. The acquisition part is less applicable for B2B, where your sales force matters more. Any approach works if you’re building a business for an additional $10-20k monthly personal income.
Let’s look at the basics. What kind of products are there anyway?
We may structure them into 3 types:
Painkillers 💊 – products that drastically change the approach to solving the problem at the time of the launch. The competition in their segments was with the old ways of doing things, Uber vs classic taxis; Google.Maps with offline maps and standalone hardware; Skype with expensive international phone calls.
They had many barriers and tough competition, but they followed the Blue Ocean Strategy, which means launching in an uncontested market segment and disrupting it with tech innovation. It’s called a painkiller because the meds market is quite an accurate analogy – you struggle hard and/or frequently without having that solution available. Now, each of these products is in a red shark-tank market.
Vitamins / Delighters 🍏 – in 2024, around 99% of startups fall into this category. They substantially improve the user experience of competition or predecessors but do not actually change the core. Chrome won browser wars with a very close solution to Explorer, Opera, and Mozilla, but it was much faster, which meant so much that eventually they became #1. Zoom did the same with Skype, providing the audience with better (still not perfect) UI, connection quality and accessibility for larger groups.
Dopamine cycle 🔁 – you know them all: socials with dopamine hooks to keep you scrolling and observing content, games with repetitive loops and microtransactions, mostly with social elements. Your economics is based not on the value of solving a substantial customer problem. Instead, it is driven by the fun and pleasure loops, making it addictive. Don’t get me wrong, those products are amazing yet ethnically ambiguous. Great business if you can build it.
I have to mention that there’s another type of the product – infrastructural or technical. You can look at what OpenAI builds (i.e. their API) from that perspective. However, depending on the use case, these products might fall into one of the 3 categories listed above.
Note. Facebook might be considered a painkiller on its initial launch, yet the model itself does fit into the latter category
Ok, got it, so what? It will define how most likely you will perform in your first 1-3 years of a startup lifecycle. Here’s roughly how it relates:
Cost for Painkillers 💊 – MVP cost is usually low to mid, if the problem is not resolved and THERE IS a technological possibility. In most cases, the first tech to create substantial value can be built quickly. The first ride-hailing app was easy to build on new smartphones, multiple AI SaaS solutions are now growing on GPT API like mushrooms, and some are actually solving substantial problems like huge costs for legal teams, etc. You need to invest in market education to find new ways of doing things. The acquisition is not cheap, but it gets better over time since customers are ready to share, and they stick pretty tightly.
Costs for Vitamins / Delighters 🍏– you already have to be better than an existing solution, so it’s re-create and surpass your predecessor. You don’t need to educate the market, but you’ll have to explain how you are better and bear the switching cost. Your retention costs will most likely be high due to competition with other solutions if you don’t manage to build great viral and dependency cycles.
Costs for Dopamine cycle 🔁 – well, to get people hooked, only the content is not enough. You will need great algorithms, creators (if UGC model), moderation and regulation. People are ready to share and try new stuff, but the attention market is a blood bath. These products relate to the network effects, so they only start to pay back after surpassing the critical user base. Be ready to raise tons of capital, not even speaking about the monetization models that usually are ads-based and become available to millions of active users. It’s usually a 3-sided marketplace with users, creators and sponsors. But if you’re an expert, you can always try.
Note that it doesn’t consider your business model and costs relative to the same model type competition on the market, but it can vary highly within one bracket.
That was a spherical horse / cow in vacuum example of how it depends on the product type. Now, let’s make it a bit more complex and add a market layer. The earlier mentioned Blue Ocean vs. Red Ocean strategy is a solid framework, but it doesn’t take into account market size differentiation and its drastic impact on tech product launches.
There’s no universal scale, it’s again relative to the market, but let’s try to put it all together, we will label smaller markets “lakes” and bigger markets “oceans” correspondingly.
In Step 2, we discussed general relative costs per product type, which also highly depend on the market structure!
Why? Due to the scaling cost rules and how the most commonly used acquisition channels are built (auction-based models). This can be referred to as “product channels fit” or simply asking, “Can I scale it to the target level with the instruments available to me?”
So, if we merge our matrix of costs and market types (I hope I am not losing you yet 😅), we might get something like this:
If rephrasing the table content:
A short recap of what we did ✍️:
So, if you have a few ideas and can gather enough qualitative and quantitative data to drag them through the stage above, congratulations— you can now weigh your chances!
But before I share with you my final approach structure – this is how it was for me for the 1st C-level / founder experience.
Spoiler – I f*cked up!
We launched in a Blue Lake type market with Vitamin type product (supplementary education) without knowing the audience well. We didn’t have any segment competition, but we overestimated the market by thinking it was an Ocean, so the targeted audience for the product was much more narrow (well, you can actually check it on the interview stage without any product)
→ → → We used the same tech to pivot into the Red Ocean market segment, but we knew that we could be more attractive in content, product quality and pricing in the long run. And it actually worked despite taking significantly higher risks.
Our CAC dropped 5 times, LTV grew 20 times, retention costs became higher, but manageable, so we finally hacked the growth. If I were about to start anew, I would first make my money in a big market with warmed-up audience, rather than going “the easy way”.
This rule was later successfully applied to every market by industry, geography we launched, and all the tech companies I worked in/with, so I think it’s a solid baseline model.
Eventually, every case is individual. There are as many approaches as founders and startups, but I hope you can at least get additional lenses to look at your ideas. Aside from that, it might save you some nerve cells.
What’s your experience? Have you fallen into the same traps or beaten it regardless of all the complications? Where does your project or idea stand in that structure?
Let me know in the comments, or reach out to me on Meander, where I conduct mentorship sessions with early-stage founders and product managers.
Cheers, and have a good one!