Here's a common question I get from startups, especially in the early stages: when should we launch? My answer is almost always the same: don't
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Scooped by
Guillaume Decugis
onto Ideas for entrepreneurs September 15, 2017 8:56 PM
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As we're developing a new product with the Scoop.it team, I was re-reading this great post by Eric Ries on the fallacy of product launches for startups. This was also the topic for one of the roundtables I participated to at the recent CrossLink capital's Alpha Summit.
As startup people, most of us have dreamed of doing an Apple-like product launch. Get on stage, capture attention, unveil something amazing, etc...
But most startups don't have the opportunity to mobilize attention in a big way like Apple or other big companies do. Unless they have a big personal brand, founders won't get huge attention for their new babies - however beautiful they think it might be.
Perhaps more importantly, Apple-style launches mean getting products 100% ready and flawless which - for software startups - is terribly wrong. To quote LinkedIn founder Reid Hoffman: "If you are not embarrassed by the first version of your product, you’ve launched too late."
Finally, even a good launch is temporary. Great startups succeed by getting long-term, sustainable growth.
Not 15' of fame.
I failed at this several times but we got one right with Scoop.it's launch-that-wasn't-a-launch. Instead of trying to get massive PR coverage we couldn't get anyway, we launched a private beta, reached out to influential people who cared about the content curation problem, got them to use our first version which led them to blog about it and iterated the product for close to one year before finally opening the doors.
4 million users later, I think of this of our most successful launch (that wasn't).