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Ask HN: How do startups compete in crowded spaces?

3 pointsby rolandtshenover 4 years ago
I&#x27;ve seen a number of startups come out with products quite similar to older competitors, yet carve out a market for themselves. How do startups convince customers to choose them over a more mature company offering more services in those early stages?<p>Is it just a matter of targeting different customers and selling to them? Better marketing efforts? Or do you think they usually come out with a superior product off the bat?<p>Ex: Clearbit founded 4 years after FullContact, then newer competitors like Lusha Ex2: Middesk growing rapidly where Trulioo&#x2F;Cognito had a 7 year headstart

3 comments

mtmailover 4 years ago
Customers don&#x27;t know all competitors in a space like you do. A company might need a solution and only research a couple of days. I think it&#x27;s not a matter of better marketing, just different marketing. In my industry niche some companies have fixed pricing per month, some per usage, some per seat, some target &lt; 100 USD customers, some have only a free tier and the first paid tier is already 250 USD. There&#x27;s no one pricing strategy that captures every customer. I have customers that only work with me because we&#x27;re based in Europe (different data protection legislation), not related to anything in the product or pricing itself.
dheeraover 4 years ago
I cringe everytime I hear people (especially investors) talk about &quot;spaces&quot;. It encourage a mindset similar to real estate where land is limited, and you claim pieces of it.<p>Markets and technologies are not bounded spaces. They only seem &quot;crowded&quot; because all the existing players are doing similar things, when in fact the entire pie could be made much bigger if you do things a different way.
NeishaPriceover 4 years ago
Better Marketing Efforts