Why do you need something to differentiate your business from other competitors?
I am co-founder of a very young startup and I have struggle to understand why all the investors are asking for something that differentiate my business from other competitors. Assuming there is only one relatively bigger player in this very large and untapped market. What did differentiate Plated vs Blue Apron or Grubhub vs Seamless ( of course before acquisition).
Also we have shown (Launched in May 14) 25% weekly growth so far in our sales.
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[ 3.4 ms ] story [ 34.2 ms ] threadI think what many investors are getting at is less about initial differentiation and more about long-term defensibility. How can you make sure that whoever comes along (competitor or new entrant) can't just copy what you are doing for cheaper and steal away your customers? Do you have proprietary data? Network effects? Customer lock-in? Does your service increase in value the longer you around through data/network/customers?
Also, don't forget that most investors (particularly VCs) are looking for breakout successes. They want to find the next Twitter, Dropbox, Airbnb, etc. They barely make money from companies that are doing well but are just cruising along. You can probably build a profitable business just copying what your competitors are doing in a large market, but that's not what VCs are looking for.
Unless you are building life-size replicas of people out of tuna salad and Swedish Fish, other companies will do what you do. What makes your product or service better than anyone else?
ANYTHING can be the difference-- price, components, features, performance, service-- as long as you can prove to an investor that IT is the reason people are giving your money, as opposed to competitors.
I have a friend who opened a comic book store that he staffed with women who are lingerie models who can also (they have been trained) speak knowledgeably about comics. That's his differentiator (Hooters of comics).
If your sales are growing, there must be something you are doing right (or better)-- that people are picking coming to you for. Figure out what it is and tell your investors that.
Differentiation can be as simple as name recognition. A canonical example might be "Kleenex". AirBnB is a recent startup that I think captured some of this.
In a growing market with low barriers to entry or an established commodity market, name recognition is pretty much all there is. In a market with one dominate player, "we are not the dominate player" is can also be a meaningful differentiator.
The question is good if it is in reference to comprehensive execution - that is the context includes marketing and advertising in addition to product. It's a bit weaker if it is just about product. Product-market fit is why both Porsche and Kia successfully manufacture cars people will buy.
"Dominate" is a verb.
I would focus on your customers . . . maybe even do some quick phone interviews with them . . . or look over your feedback/support requests and add some features they request that would make your startup even better, providing them with more value . . . there are always ways to innovate and do it better than the other guy while providing more value to your customer. Then outline a few of these differences to your potential investors.
By the way, 25% a week means you grew by 50X since May. Unless you started with a really low number, that's great.