The Benefits Of Thinking Small
In previous posts I wrote about visionary entrepreneurs, and how to constantly ask how you can 10X your business. However, many startups fail because the founding team thinks *too big* from day one, and doesn't take the time to really define the short term, immediate value their product or business provides.
In previous posts I wrote about visionary entrepreneurs, and how to constantly ask how you can 10X your business. However, many startups fail because the founding team thinks *too big* from day one, and doesn't take the time to really define the short term, immediate value their product or business provides.
Now, while it is crucial to think small and to build something that does not scale, you should always keep in mind the long term path for your business or product. This path (and the end goal the path itself leads too) may continuously change as you learn more and as circumstances dictate. However, you should constantly be thinking how to make what you have even bigger than what it is.
Implications: Why The YC Model WorksThis post was originally inspired by a question on Quora about whether the YC model can generate big successes, despite its emphasis on "small markets" and "low risk" products. As I point out above, thinking small if often the key to building something truly huge.
A common VC question is "how does this scale?". Ultimately, to build a large, long-term business you need to be able to take an approach and scale it. However, it is OK to start with something that is manual and hands on. The key is to have something that can be systematized and replicated over and over eventually.