Dangerous signs that you should kill your startup idea

Knowing when to pivot or quit is true product wisdom

Zoe Chew
5 min readMar 15, 2023

This post is one of my šŸ”„Multi-Part Product Guide series. You may also like my top-rated guides such as ā€” Validate Product Opportunity, Test Willingness To Pay, and Profitable SaaS Ideas. āœļøJoin my free newsletter to receive these insights!

šŸ˜± Many startups fail because they donā€™t recognize the signs that their product isnā€™t working and continue adding more features. You can avoid building something that no one wants if you recognize the warning signs early on. In this post, Iā€™ll explain how to tell if itā€™s time to pivot or kill a product idea.

Factor 1: Invalidated Riskiest Assumptions

Jumping into building an MVP without assumption testing can lead to missing crucial signs.

The riskiest assumptions are critical factors that can kill your startup, so they must be tested during the ideation and pre-product stages.

By conducting pre-product experiments, you can identify if customers care about the problem youā€™re solving or if itā€™s worth solving at all.

If experiments reveal that customers donā€™t care about the problem youā€™re solving, or the problem isnā€™t worth solving ā€” or the problem isnā€™t valid, itā€™s time to kill the idea.

Example

šŸ¤” Problem assumption: There is a lack of variety in natural product options.

šŸ™Š User feedback: Lack of affordable options is a bigger issue for customers than lack of variety.

šŸŽÆ What to do next: Focus on solving the bigger problem of affordability. If the assumption regarding affordability is validated, build upon this direction.

Factor 2: Canā€™t deliver great values to users

Differentiation becomes important in competitive markets such as farm produce, e-commerce, Fast Moving Consumer Goods and transportation services.

The higher the value of a product, the more likely it is that you will be able to differentiate, monetize and build a profitable business.

Customers will only pay for your solution if it provides values. Here are different ways to create values for your users:

  • Functional value ā€” How well a product solves a userā€™s problem, i.e. by considering product features, benefits and performance.
  • Monetary value ā€” How this product can help people save money. For example, lowering cost and expenses, getting more quality for less money, and so on.
  • Emotional value ā€” How does this product make you feel after you use it?
  • Social value ā€” How does this product fulfil a personā€™s social status or influence within their social circle or community?

Example

šŸ“² Situation: You have free users for your no-code mobile app but struggle to monetize due to the need to expand the product features and create paid offerings.

šŸ˜² Why it wonā€™t work: Expectations rise as software becomes more widely available. Customers will only pay more for a product if it provides better value in comparison to competitorsā€™ solution.

šŸ”„ What to do next: Consider seeking additional resources (technical, capital or expertise) to develop products that can deliver significant value to users. If your goal is to become a solo/lifestyle business, consider working on viable ideas that you can monetize while still providing great value to users.

Factor 3: Lack of product/market fit

When there is a lack of product-market fit, it is unlikely that the product will become sustainable in the long-term. This is becauseā€¦

  • There arenā€™t enough customers buying the product in the intended target market
  • There arenā€™t enough customers raving about your product, thus increases the need for paid marketing and customer acquisition cost
  • Insufficient channel/market fit ā€” marketing channels are ineffective because the product does not resonate with the target market.
  • There arenā€™t enough repeat customers due to a lack of satisfied customers, which leads to low sales and revenue.

Example

šŸ€šŸ‘ŸSituation: You have built an online marketplace for buying and selling used sneakers, with initial paid users in a small target market. However, youā€™re struggling to expand to a larger market size.

šŸ—ŗļø Why it wonā€™t work: The product is not performing well in other areas, regions or countries, limiting potential sales and revenue. Slow growth and low retention rates also indicate a lack of product-market fit.

šŸ“ What to do next: Pivot the business to focus on a different product or market. For example, explore other category of products with higher resale potential and target a broader audience to achieve greater revenue and growth potential.

šŸš€ Takeaway

  • To pivot a product means changing its direction to better cater to the marketā€™s needs, while killing an idea means stopping its development and completely switching to a new idea.
  • Listening to customer feedback, analyzing data and mastering market needs to shape the direction of your product.
  • Youā€™re not married to a product idea. In fact, great founders change their idea when needed without abandoning their vision. E.g. Slack was originally developed as a gaming platform that failed to take off.
  • Rapid experimentation is key. Observe when certain product features donā€™t resonate with the target customers, identify customer dissatisfaction, and recognize obstacles to gaining traction.
  • Donā€™t shy away from building new products in competitive markets. Lyft and Uber competes for ride-sharing services but have differentiated themselves with various business moats.

Validate peopleā€™s willingness to pay for your idea

Updated on Jan 19, 2024

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Zoe Chew
Zoe Chew

Written by Zoe Chew

Sharing my journey as an entrepreneur, creator, and lifelong learner. Building Venturescale.to and Rapidmvps.com . About me whizzoe.com

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