"Why would you invest energy and resources into the development of a product, instead of doing research and coming up with a solid plan and strategy for going to market?"
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Scooped by
Guillaume Decugis
onto Ideas for entrepreneurs March 16, 2016 4:08 PM
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There's a saying that goes: "don't sell the bear's fur before killing it". But there's one that I prefer and that applies to entrepreneurs: "why bother killing the bear if you haven't sold the bear's fur yet?"
When I became an entrepreneur 16 years ago, building technology was not as easy as it is today. No AWS, much less ready-made Saas software, etc... So we didn't have the temptation "to build it and they will come".
But today, as Bram Kanstein explains in this post, it's easy to forget about doing your research and rush to building a product.
He makes an essential point about understanding the problem solved, current alternatives, etc... and his post is a great read.
But I'll go even further: for a lot of entrepreneurs, finding and building a community and an audience first can be a very valuable exercize. If a successful product can only be built by researching and understanding very well a precise problem and need from a group of people, then identifying that group and making useful connexions within that group is a great first step. In other words:
- Don't [build a product] > [find the problem it solves ] > [find the target group that has the problem]
- Do [connect with a group that have things in common] > [understand their #1 challenge] > [build a product].