Start smaller than your ambition
The first version of a business should prove demand before it tries to look complete. Pick one audience, one painful problem, and one simple offer you can explain without a slide deck.
- Talk to potential customers before buying tools.
- Write the first offer in one sentence.
- Estimate the cost of delivering one sale.
- Choose a launch date close enough to force decisions.
Validate before you build too much
A landing page, a manual service, a paid pilot, or a waitlist can teach you faster than months of private planning. You are looking for evidence that people care enough to act.
Set up the basics early
Registration, bookkeeping, contracts, and a simple website do not need to be fancy. They need to be clean enough that you can sell, collect payment, and stay organized.
Your first 30 days
Spend the first month talking to customers, improving the offer, checking costs, and making the next sale easier than the last one.