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by bruce511 671 days ago
If you can't find people before you make it, then you won't find them after you make it either.

Which makes this an excellent question. Indeed perhaps the most important question to ask before you build anything.

Too many programmers subscribe to the school of "if you build it through will come'. (Hint: that's not how it works.)

Firstly you don't have to show anything to potential customers, (and even when you have it, it's better not to show it.) You are selling benefits, not features.

Secondly, how to find them is exactly the hard problem you need to figure out (it'll be different for different products.) For me personally, I the late 90s / early aughts, I traveled to user groups (all over the world.) Turns out that "showing up" spread the word very quickly.

(That worked for me because it's a niche area and nobody else bothered to travel, so I stood out.)

The key lesson here- if you can't define your market, and if you can't reach them, you can't sell to them.

Every business has hard problems. This may be yours. Solve this problem first, not last.

2 comments

That’s a mistake I see too many people make. They try to solve a problem and build a product from afar, using their imagination or trying to copy an existing product without having personal relationships with people having that problem (or without having it themselves). I guess it’s possible to create a product first and then find people who need it and iterate from there, but I’ve found that having personal relationships and then making something in response to a common problem they have is the only way to start and grow. That’s what I’ve found “talk to users” actually means.
This is actually a really informative answer!

This quote really stod out tho: If you can't find people before you make it, Then you won't find them after you make it either.

literly every time i just wasted money in business was because i didn't work by this quote!

“The mom test” is an amazing book for this exact problem