Saurabh Singh Web3, AI, and Space

Take a journey through my first startup

T

We were like every other undergraduate student. We were motivated to build a business while in college and even skipped our college placements.

People say ‘Startup is like jumping off the cliff and then building a parachute before you hit the ground’. In our case, we did jump off the cliff but didn’t bring the tools to build the parachute. Sigh.

Let me take you through my journey from early motivation to the demise of my startup.

Motivation

April 2013

I still remember that night when I strolled in my university with my friend and discussed how are these great companies built? and who built them? We went on discussing the prospects of building an internet company and started thinking over a random idea. We discussed how it will work, how we will make money, and where can we reach with that. I loved the idea of building my own company, it gave me goosebumps! ‘Something Pvt. Ltd.’ owned by two guys who are still in college!

‘An entrepreneur’ – became my life goal the next morning.

Fast forward to March 2014

2013 was a great year. I started learning to code with only one motive in mind, to build a website for my future startup. I read books like Rework, Purple Cow, Startup Playbook, Crossing the Chasm, and plenty more to feed my insatiable hunger to learn about building startups. This was the time when I started following YourStory and it kept me motivated.

I gained the skills to build a website and a tiny bit of knowledge to build a startup. It was the end of March and an idea started to dawn on me. A network for students in college where then can collaborate, help, train, and connect with their alumni.

I named it ScholarNet. It was a massive project, and way out of reach from me and even from some great minds in computer science branch. I got in touch with some professional web developers and they asked 5 – 8 Lakhs to build it. I would have paid that money but thankfully my monthly allowance of Rs. 5000 didn’t let me.

Ideation

July 2014

I didn’t had the money to get my startup built and ScholarNet was a huge project. I had to trim it down so that I could build it on my own. I laid down my idea on a sheet of paper and looked for a starting point.

I came across ‘Training’. ‘Training – that’s it!’ A website where you can find all the vocational training courses in your city and get reviews from fellow students as well (you can say Udacity for offline courses). I did a quick research and found that nobody was doing this in my city. I fell in love with my idea and shared it with my friend. He was also excited about it and I brought him on-board as a co-founder.

It took us just 4 days to refine our idea and find a domain name for it. We started working on it on the 5th day.

The Product

August 2014

It was a complex website and took nearly a month to build. Our website allowed the students to know which institutes offered a particular course, read reviews of the course, watch demo lectures, view photos of the institute, and find its location via Google Maps. With one click they could easily apply to the institute and avail maximum discount on the course fees. We were really proud of what we created and fell in love with it.

So far we had an idea and a minimum viable product (MVP) with no market validation or a customer.

We decided to pitch our product to an institute. We fixed a meeting one of the most reputed institutes and showed them our product. We showed them how great our product was, what benefits they could get out of it, and how cheap it was when compared to their methods of marketing. To our surprise, they didn’t like our product. They loved it! They were ready to pay Rs.15,000 in cash on the spot! We were excited, spellbound, and it felt really great.

September – October 2014

We were on cloud nine after our first success and approached 12 -14 more institutes in the coming months and 10 of them signed up on the spot! It was as if our product was the solution to all their suffering.

We took feedback from the institutes and modified our product to their liking.

November – December 2014

The work was manageable till now but it was bound to go out of hands from two of us. We approached two of our friends and brought them on board. This was the time when our focus shifted from creating a great product to generating large revenues.

So far we had validation from institutes but zero validation from our end users- the students.

The ‘Launch’

January 2015

We had decided to ‘launch’ our startup on 19th January 2015. We had it all, courses from best institutes, discounts, and a free resume builder. We believed it was destined to be a hit.

On 19th of January we ‘launched’ our startup and it was not a hit. It was an all-round flop show. We demonstrated our product to hundreds of students and no one seemed to care about it. We were confused, we pondered ‘what is wrong?’, ‘institutes love this, why not students?’, ‘we have got discounts, ease of applying to the institutes, resume builder, isn’t this what they wanted?’.

It was the first time we ever demonstrated our product to our end users. The biggest mistake.

February – March 2015

It’s that time of the year when we have our college fests going on. We got ourselves free space to promote our start up. We planned to feast the students who signed up for our website. We became popular and our website traffic grew by 300% but no one opted for the course from our website.

Students were enrolling, but not through us.

The Demise

April – May 2015

During this period when students opt for vocational training we were hoping to show a stellar performance. We had pumped up our ‘advertising’ and offered extra discounts, on our part, for training courses applied through us. Sadly, we received a mere 11 applicants.

We found out later that students received hefty ‘group discounts’ (more than ours), and some of them joined vocational training at a government institute. It made all sense.

June 2015

We officially shut down our startup and the team parted ways.

What did I learn?

  1. Plan and validate – Don’t start something because you ‘feel’ it’s right. Go out. Get your hands dirty. Do some market research. Find out the problem that your customer segment is facing and does your solution really alleviate the problem. Get your idea validated.
  2. Find a great Co-Founder – It’s certain that you cannot possess all the knowledge of the world. It’s wise to start with a co-founder, but don’t start with any co-founder; your best friend may not be your best co-founder.
  3. Don’t fall in love with your prototype – it’s a prototype. Get over it. Prototypes are meant to be changed.
  4. Define your end user – Our end users were students but we built the product that was great for institutes. We took feedback from institutes and built the product to their liking. We ‘assumed’ that the students will love this product, they didn’t.
  5. Don’t run after revenue – Revenue should always be a by-product of your startup and not a primary goal. Build your product so that your end users love it, ‘like’ is not an option.
  6. Advertising is a bad option – We did it. We failed. Word of mouth is all that you need. If your product is amazing, don’t worry about ‘advertising’, your end users will spread the news for you. They will do anything to tell their peers how awesome your product is. Ask these questions before you advertise- ‘what is wrong with our product?’ and ‘why there is no word of mouth?’.

 

About the author

Saurabh Singh

Web3, AI and Space. The three areas where I build or buidl.
I love reading books. You can find me carrying my notebook to scribble my ideas. You can follow my blog saurabh.io and get some great startup advice and learn from my journey.

Add Comment

Saurabh Singh Web3, AI, and Space

Archives