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by asuth
5171 days ago
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I don't see our competitive position as different than any other typical company. We've got a great product that people love, and we build new things into it that our competitors can't predict or move fast enough to build. We've built a brand that students and teachers know and like. One deliberate competitive advantage is that we're a free, ad-supported site. Most education products go for a subscription model, and that requires enterprise sales (selling to districts, blech) and fundamentally limits the number of people who will use and enjoy your product. The ad model only works when you have scale (which we do). If we had been in a position where we needed to make money quickly, we wouldn't have grown into the size and scope we have now. |
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You've been fortunate that you could utilise a tangible and working prototype to gain customer insight. Congrats on building this into a business.
Other approaches (like lean) encourage you to first evaluate your idea/concept before building a prototype. When a concept has some good potential then going straight to prototype can work. Its having this confidence that has worked for you.