What If the idea is already exist in market ?
Sajith P J
13 replies
I have a product idea in my mind and when I researched it, there is a lot of companies that are successful in the market and a lot of them are not successful. I am so confused, should I create an MVP to find some customers or should I change my idea?
The idea is in my skill range, I can handle all the difficulties while developing it.
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Slim Geransar@slimmy82
REI Litics
Read a book called “the mom test” by Rob Fitzpatrick. Do several interviews. Find pain points of customer using competitor products. Determine if the market size is big enough to have several competitors.
There plenty of car brands, there plenty of fast cook restaurants, clothing lines etc. Point being you don’t need to have a ground breaking innovation. You just need to provide more value than the other guy
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@sajith_p_j anytime!
NVSTly: Social Investing
Need answers to this question; "Why would I switch from this product to another idea?"
Some answers;
- it's better
- it's cheaper
- it has X or doesnt have Z
NVSTly: Social Investing
@sajith_p_j Best of luck with it
I've heard several VC professionals say that it's not about the idea, but about the implementation. The fact that there are companies on the market built on a similar idea proves two things:
1. There is a demand for your idea, since many companies are working on it.
2. It's commercially feasible, as some of them are successful.
So, I think an MVP is a good start if you can create it in a reasonable amount of time, effort, and investment. Anyway, goog luck! 😊
@sajith_p_j YWC. Good luck! 😀
@betterforall Thank you for the time to address my doubts. I will create a MVP to get some feedback from customers.
if the idea exists than its more likely to be a great idea. if you have that killer advantage whether its skill / network etc then competitors don't matter, but actually help confirm that the idea works and helps push you to make your product better than theirs
+1 Without knowing the details…I would say focus on talking to users and finding a more niche underserved need. There was MySpace before FB, Lyft before Uber, Google Drive before Dropbox, Skype before Zoom, Adobe before Canva…hope that helps.
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@michael_founder23 right on!!