8.7 KiB
Startup Fundamentals
Table of Contents
- Introduction to Startups
- Finding Your Idea
- Market Research & Validation
- Building Your Team
- Lean Startup Methodology
- Fundraising Essentials
- Growth & Scaling
- Common Pitfalls
Introduction to Startups
A startup is a newly-formed business venture with high growth potential. This course covers the essentials for taking an idea from concept to sustainable business.
What Makes a Startup?
Characteristics:
- Solving a significant problem
- Rapid growth potential
- Innovation at core
- Uncertain, risky environment
- Constrained resources
- Mission-driven team
Startup Vs. Traditional Business
| Aspect | Startup | Traditional Business |
|---|---|---|
| Growth | Rapid scaling focus | Steady, predictable |
| Risk | High uncertainty | Lower risk, proven model |
| Resources | Limited, creative use | Abundant, established budget |
| Innovation | Core to strategy | Incremental improvement |
| Culture | Experimental, fast | Stable, process-driven |
| Timeline | Urgent, compressed | Long-term horizon |
Finding Your Idea
Common Startup Origins
- Personal Problem: You experience the problem
- Domain Expertise: Deep knowledge of industry
- Technology Breakthrough: New capability enables solution
- Market Gap: Unmet customer need
- Combination: Existing ideas in new context
Brainstorming Techniques
Mind Mapping
Central Idea
├── Problem Category 1
│ ├── Sub-problem
│ └── Sub-problem
├── Problem Category 2
│ └── Potential Solutions
└── Opportunities
The 10x Rule
- Don't improve by 10%
- Aim for 10x better
- Creates defensible advantage
- Worth the effort to build
Evaluating Ideas
Score your idea (1-10):
| Criteria | Score |
|---|---|
| Do you care about solving this? | ___ |
| Is it a large market? | ___ |
| Can this be built? | ___ |
| Are you the right person? | ___ |
| Is timing right? | ___ |
| Is there existing demand? | ___ |
Target: 6+ average score to pursue further
Market Research & Validation
Understanding Your Market
Total Addressable Market (TAM)
- Entire market size for your solution
- If 1M businesses spend $1K/year = $1B TAM
Serviceable Addressable Market (SAM)
- Realistic segment you can serve
- Geographic or demographic focus
Serviceable Obtainable Market (SOM)
- Revenue you can realistically capture
- First 3-5 years typically
Customer Discovery Interviews
Process:
- Find 20+ potential customers
- Ask open-ended questions
- Listen more than talk
- Identify patterns
- Document insights
Example Questions:
- How do you currently solve this problem?
- What's the biggest pain point?
- What would ideal solution look like?
- Would you pay for this? How much?
- When would you need this?
Validation Techniques
Smoke Test: Landing page with sign-ups MVP: Minimum viable product to test Pre-sales: Customers pay before launch Pilot Program: Small group uses product Surveys: Structured feedback collection
Building Your Team
Co-founder Selection
Critical qualities:
- Complementary skills
- Shared vision/values
- Ability to disagree constructively
- Commitment/reliability
- Similar work ethic
Common co-founder groups:
- School/university friends
- Former colleagues
- Online community connections
- Customers becoming partners
Hiring Early Team
First hires:
- Technical co-founder or lead engineer: Build product
- Sales/customer person: Get customers
- Operations: Keep things organized
Hiring principles:
- Hire for attitude/culture fit
- Train skills
- Start part-time if possible
- Use equity to bridge salary gap
Equity Distribution
Typical equity splits:
CEO/Founder 1: 33%
CEO/Founder 2: 33%
Early Engineer: 20%
Advisor/Investor: 10-15%
Employee Option Pool: 10-20%
Vesting: 4 years with 1-year cliff (standard)
Lean Startup Methodology
Build-Measure-Learn Cycle
Product Idea
↓
Build MVP (Minimum Viable Product)
↓
Measure (Gather data on usage)
↓
Learn (Analyze what you learned)
↓
Pivot or Persevere Decision
↓
Repeat (Until Product-Market Fit)
MVP Definition
Minimum Viable Product:
- Core features only
- Just enough to solve problem
- Can be built/launched quickly
- Gathers real user feedback
MVP Examples:
- Landing page with pre-orders
- Manual process (no automation)
- Basic prototype
- Limited geographic launch
- Single use case focus
Metrics to Track
Actionable Metrics:
- Activation (users completing onboarding)
- Retention (return usage rate)
- Revenue (monthly recurring revenue)
- Referral (organic growth rate)
- Churn (percentage leaving)
Avoid Vanity Metrics:
- Total users (may be inflated)
- Downloads (doesn't indicate engagement)
- Page views (low barrier)
Fundraising Essentials
Funding Stages
Friends & Family ($25K-$250K)
- Early believers in you
- Less formal
- Demonstrate concept viability
Seed Round ($250K-$2M)
- Angel investors or seed funds
- Proof of concept needed
- Build MVP and get users
Series A ($2M-$15M)
- Early venture capital
- Product-market fit shown
- Ready to scale
Series B+ ($15M+)
- Growth and expansion
- Proven business model
- Path to profitability
Building Your Pitch Deck
Essential slides:
- Title Slide: Company, tagline
- Problem: What's broken?
- Solution: Your solution
- Market: TAM/SAM/SOM
- Business Model: How you make money
- Traction: Evidence it works
- Team: Who's building this?
- Competition: Who else is trying?
- Financial Projections: 5-year outlook
- Ask: How much you're raising
Elevator Pitch
30-60 second summary:
"We're building [solution] for [target customer]
who [have this problem]. Unlike [existing solution],
we [unique advantage]. We're looking for
[funding amount] to [use of funds]."
Example:
"We're building software for remote teams
who struggle with asynchronous collaboration.
Unlike Slack, we focus on deep work with AI-assisted
summarization. We're raising $1M to expand our
product and grow our team."
Growth & Scaling
Growth Loops
Self-reinforcing systems that drive growth:
Viral Loop: User brings friends
- Product value increases with users
- Organic invite mechanism
- Network effects
Paid Loop: Spend to acquire, monetize to reinvest
- Cost to acquire customer: $100
- Lifetime value per customer: $500
- Reinvest to acquire more
Content Loop: Create value, attract customers
- Publish useful content
- Drive organic traffic
- Convert some to customers
Unit Economics
Key metrics for sustainable growth:
Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) = Marketing Spend / New Customers
Lifetime Value (LTV) = Revenue per Customer × Customer Lifespan
LTV:CAC Ratio = LTV / CAC (Target: 3:1 or better)
Monthly Churn Rate = Cancelled Users / Total Users
Churn directly reduces LTV
Scaling Challenges
Growing too fast: Burn through cash, team quality suffers Growing too slow: Competitors catch up, runway depletes Culture dilution: Early team's values may not scale Technical debt: Quick builds need refactoring
Common Pitfalls
Top Reasons Startups Fail
- Wrong problem: Solving non-existent or too-small problem
- No market need: Product doesn't address real pain
- Ran out of money: Poor cash management
- Lost focus: Trying to do too much
- Bad team: Wrong people for the challenge
- Product issues: Too complex, poorly designed
- No business model: Can't figure out monetization
- Outcompeted: Better-funded competitor arrives
Red Flags to Avoid
- Not talking to customers regularly
- Ignoring metrics/data
- Founders who can't disagree constructively
- Trying to build perfect product before launch
- Pivoting too frequently
- Spending excessively early
- Not understanding your unit economics
Conclusion
Starting a company is one of the most challenging and rewarding endeavors you can undertake. Success requires:
- Persistence: Most startups take 5-10 years to become successful
- Customer focus: Always validate assumptions with real users
- Team: Surround yourself with capable, trustworthy people
- Adaptability: Be willing to pivot when data suggests you should
- Resilience: Handle rejection and failure as learning opportunities
Study successful startup founders, learn from their experiences, and apply these principles to your own journey. The world needs more innovative solutions to important problems—you might be the one to build them.