Why 'Build First, Sell Later' Is Killing Your Startup Dreams
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Audience-first companies are the future.
This $5M pre-sale proves it.
Here's what's shaking things up:
📉 Building costs are plummeting (thanks to AI)
🧑💻 Anyone can "vibe code" sellable products
📈 Acquisition channels are saturated, making it harder to reach your ideal customers.
This creates a huge risk for traditional startups.
By the time you launch, your product is irrelevant.
The trap to avoid:
→ Build for 6-12 months
→ Find market conditions have shifted
→ Discover competitors have emerged
→ Realize your feature set is already outdated
→ Run out of $$$ before finding traction
Here's the alternative path:
🔑 Build an audience around your expertise
🔑 Launch micro-products w/ a small team
🔑 Generate revenue from day one to fund dev
🔑 Pre-sell to validate demand before major investment in bigger solutions
To be clear: This doesn't work for every business.
Deep tech, regulated industries, and complex B2B platforms still require substantial upfront investment & development.
But even these can benefit from focused audience building in parallel.
For consumer apps, SaaS tools, and service-based businesses?
The audience-first approach reduces risk significantly.
Gone are the days of...
"that's a feature, not a company."
When a single founder can release a micro-SaaS product in 1-2 months, defensibility isn't important.
Unfair advantage comes from built-in distribution.
The skeptics will say:
"Building an audience takes too long!"
"It's HARDER than building a company."
Here's where nuance matters:
You don't need millions of followers like Linus Tech Tips (although that would be nice, right?)
You need 1,000 of the RIGHT people.
A newsletter with 1,000 CIOs is more valuable than 1,000,000 mixed followers.
You don't need to wait until your audience is "large enough" before starting development.
These processes can run in parallel, with your growing audience providing real-time feedback.
For ambitious founders tackling complex problems, venture funding remains valuable.
But for the majority of founders...
A lower risk, less stressful, (still lucrative) model is here:
→ Build an audience
→ Sell smaller tools faster to generate $$$
→ Validate expansion with pre-sales
→ Grow sustainably w/ real customers from day-1
What do you think?
Is the "build first, find customers later" approach outdated?
Demand Curve Links:
• Website: https://www.demandcurve.com/
• LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/demandcurve/
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• YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@demandcurve
• TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@demand_curve
• Insta: https://www.instagram.com/demand_curve
• Growth Newsletter (Twice Weekly): https://www.demandcurve.com/newsletter
• Growth Program (Course): https://www.demandcurve.com/growth-program
Created by:
Kevin DePopas, Chief Growth Officer @ Demand Curve
• LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/kevindepopas/
• X: https://x.com/kdepop
• YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@kevindepopas
• TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@kevindepopas
• Insta: https://www.instagram.com/kevindepopas_content