Want to build SaaS? Amazing,but don't start with it.
Dan Kulkov
15 replies
You are 99% likely to fail with SaaS as a first startup for 2 reasons:
ā Not enough audience to support you
ā Not enough knowledge about customers' problems
Odds are against you š„²
Start with these products to solve these issues.
Launching SaaS next would be a piece of cake.
1) Curated list
2) Notion template
3) Newsletter
4) Closed community
5) 30-day challenge
6) 1-person agency
7) Pre-recorded course
8) Podcast
9) Email course
10) Blog
Full thread ā https://twitter.com/DanKulkov/status/1543663255230377985
What product idea would you add?
Replies
G. M. Mehdi@g_m_mehdi
What would you say to founders who've built a great product with enough of no.2(solving real problems) but not enough of no.1 which is the community?
Share
@g_m_mehdi you can't know the problem without having a community. spend more time gathering people
Research tool to survey my target audience and early adopters
@prachi_gupta2 love it! sounds really smart
Thanks, Dan for sharing it. Really helpful.
@sushil_sharma2 glad that you liked it Sushil!
Hi, curious why building an audience in the other 10 categories is any easier than building an audience for a SaaS?
@bobby_swinson it takes less time to ship an MVP, it often can be cheaper or even free for customers, it's easier to market
The start-up I recently started with has built a great community around the product and was founded by a team with first-hand experience of the problem. This post gives great insight into why people are willing to jump on board with the SaaS model.
this is a good roadmap. thanks for sharing.
Interesting take! I think the audience point is definitely relevant. But to get more insight into customers' problems, one key has to be to get actual feedback on what you're building. SaaS companies also fail because they launch late and can't pivot.