Thursday, 18 June 2026

Mighty Home — The Amazon Teardown: A Premium Plant-Stand Ladder Leaking ₹10L a Month

Brand context
Mighty Home
Heavy-duty iron plant stands & home racks
Powerlaw
Founder Report · June 2026
Prepared for the founder · Mighty Home

You've built a real premium ladder. ₹10L a month is slipping through the gaps — and the window is 90 days.

Est. Amazon GMV
₹29L
/ month · our estimate
Cost of waiting
₹10L
/ month · doesn't come back
Productive ASINs
6 / 65
~9% of catalog earns
Hero rank
#507
2-tier, Plant Stands
Revenue by tier — a working product ladder
Executive Highlight · 30-second read
  • 1A premium ladder that works — ~₹29L/mo at ₹1.8K–3.7K AOV; the 2-tier (#507) and 3-tier (#1,173) carry 79% of revenue.
  • 2The top of the ladder is stalling — the ₹3.7K 4-tier sits at BSR #3,586; a listing/price fix unlocks the highest-margin SKU.
  • 359 of 65 ASINs earn nothing — Wall Shelves (24) and Desks (5) are fully dead despite being natural adjacencies for a home-essentials brand.
  • 4The compounding move — capture reviews on the premium ladder (none showing) before Amazon's own Solimo locks the heavy-duty lane.
  • 5The bottom line — the premium ladder is real and proven; the 4-tier, the missing reviews, and the dead adjacencies are what is leaking it.
02Business fundamentals
03Catalog architecture
04The product ladder
05Competitive map
06Off-Amazon flywheel
07Paid & demand
0890-day plan
09Financial scenarios
10Risk map
11Honest disclosure
12The ask
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential01 / 12
Revenue picture
02 · Business fundamentals

A premium brand with a real range — and real leakage

Est. GMV / mo
₹29L
range ₹27–33L
Est. units / mo
~1,200
premium AOV
Avg price
₹1.6K
₹1.8K–3.7K ladder
Earning categories
1 / 4
Plant Stands only
Unlike most sellers at this scale, Mighty Home already sells a premium, multi-price-point range under one brand (KEY CRAFT, on FBA). The product strategy is right. The leakage is in execution — reviews, the top tier, and the dead adjacencies.
The math of waiting. We estimate ₹10L/month is leaking: the ₹3.7K 4-tier — the highest-margin SKU — is stranded at BSR #3,586 while the cheaper tiers sell, so the margin mix is upside-down; not a single rating is showing on premium ₹2–4K listings where trust drives conversion most; and 59 of 65 ASINs (all of Wall Shelves and Desks) earn nothing. None of that is a demand problem — the demand is proven on the lower tiers. It's unconverted upside, and every month it stays unconverted, Amazon's own Solimo banks the heavy-duty reviews instead.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential02 / 12
Catalog mapped
03 · Catalog architecture

Six listings earn. Two whole categories sit idle.

Each square is one live ASIN. Coloured = earning. The dead Wall Shelves and Desks are the clearest adjacency upside.
Earning (6)Dormant / dead (59)
65 ASINs across 4 categories; only Plant Stands earns. Wall Shelves (24 ASINs) and Desks (5) are live but dormant — same buyer, same "heavy-duty home" promise, zero revenue.
The brand already manufactures into two adjacent categories the customer would buy from it. They just aren't being merchandised or supported. That's revenue sitting on the shelf.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential03 / 12
Ladder audit
04 · The product ladder

The bottom two rungs sell. The top rung is stuck.

2-tier (₹1.8K, BSR #507) and 3-tier (₹2.8K, #1,173) do 79% of revenue. The 4-tier at ₹3.7K stalls at #3,586 — the premium, highest-margin rung isn't converting. Each tier also runs as black + white variants, partly splitting rank.
Highest-ROI single fix. Get the 4-tier moving. It already shares the brand's trust and imagery; at ₹3.7K each incremental unit is worth ~2× a 2-tier sale. Consolidate the black/white variants into one parent, fix the price-to-value story in the listing, and seed reviews — the rung is built, it just isn't merchandised to convert. Hero ASINs: B0DXL5RP77 (black), B0DXL6NXVV (white).
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential04 / 12
Competitors mapped
05 · Competitive map

Amazon's own brand is in your lane

Position by price (x) and review authority (y). The premium heavy-duty segment Mighty Home owns on product is being contested on trust.
Mighty Home sits premium-right but low on authority because reviews aren't captured. B0CXPTLJP1 (Amazon's Solimo) and B0846M9L1R (TrustBasket) lead on trust signals; STANDARD PLANTS and BEHOMA contest the premium look.
The math of waiting. Amazon's Solimo brand gets placement and review momentum that a third-party seller cannot match dollar-for-dollar — its heavy-duty 3-tier is already accumulating reviews on a single consolidated listing. Mighty Home sells at a higher, more defensible AOV but shows no ratings at all, so on a ₹2,800 decision the buyer has nothing to trust. Every month without review capture widens a gap that, once Solimo or TrustBasket locks the "heavy-duty plant stand" head term, becomes a permanent CPC tax to rank against. The cheapest review you'll ever earn is this month's.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential05 / 12
Off-Amazon gap
06 · Off-Amazon flywheel

No flywheel yet — pure upside for a premium brand

Marketplace-only (Amazon FBA via KEY CRAFT, plus Flipkart). No D2C site, no verified brand social. For a premium ₹2–4K range, content and social proof are exactly what justify the price — and they're absent.
Strategic implication. Premium AOV is the asset here: each incremental unit funds growth comfortably, and FBA means logistics are already solved. Sequence: lock the Amazon ladder (reviews + the 4-tier) where money already flows, light up the Wall Shelves and Desks adjacencies, then build a single brand presence (IG + a simple D2C) that earns the premium price off-Amazon too.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential06 / 12
Ad readiness
07 · Paid & demand

Proven lower-tier demand, no visible ad engine

The 2-tier at #507 shows strong organic pull. No paid Meta activity found and the ad state wasn't read directly — meaning Sponsored Products would amplify proven converters and push the stalled 4-tier, rather than prop up weak listings.
Order: capture reviews on the ladder, fix the 4-tier, then let Sponsored Products carry the premium tiers and defend the brand term against Solimo and TrustBasket.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential07 / 12
90-day plan
08 · 90-day plan

Fix the top rung → capture reviews → amplify → expand adjacencies

The math of waiting. Two of the four earning rungs (the 4-tiers) sit at #3,586 — effectively invisible — and the whole ladder shows zero ratings. We estimate the stalled top tier plus uncaptured reviews cost ~₹2.5L/week in foregone premium-margin sales, monotonically, while Solimo banks the heavy-duty reviews you aren't. Phase 1 delay has a fixed weekly price, and at this AOV every lost sale is a high-margin one.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential08 / 12
Financial model
09 · Financial scenarios

From ~₹29L to ₹47L/month on the range you already make

Base case: reviews on the ladder + the 4-tier fix + disciplined Sponsored Products + activating Wall Shelves. Incremental paid ROAS modelled at 4.8×. No new product lines required — the SKUs already exist.
Read the base case. The lift comes from converting what's already built: the top rung, the dead adjacencies, and trust. Roughly two-thirds is review-and-merchandising work (low marginal cost at this AOV); only the final third leans on paid. The aggressive case adds a real Wall Shelves push and brand-term dominance.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential09 / 12
Risk map
10 · Risk map

What could go wrong, by impact × likelihood

Top-right = act first. The platform-brand (Solimo) threat and the missing review base are the two that compound — both addressed in Phase 1–2.
The math of waiting · compounded. The premium position is the strength and the exposure: at ₹2–4K, buyers lean hardest on reviews, and Mighty Home has none while Amazon's own brand accrues them with structural placement advantages. Acting now — reviews + the 4-tier + adjacencies — is cheap and uses SKUs that already exist. Acting after Solimo locks the heavy-duty head term means buying rank through paid indefinitely, roughly 3–4× more expensive than pre-empting it.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential10 / 12
Candid
11 · Honest disclosure

Every load-bearing number, with its confidence

A few visual-listing fields were not read live off Amazon for this report. Here's what's solid vs directional.
High = read directly. Medium = our estimate. Directional = not surfaced without a live Amazon read (hero rating/review count, A+ / image / video / coupon). All sharpen in a pilot.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential11 / 12
The ask
12 · The ask

90 days to convert the ladder you already built

The opportunity. The lift comes from converting what is already built — the premium top rung, the dead adjacencies, and trust. Most of it is review-and-merchandising work at high AOV.

If you are solving this kind of problem on Amazon

This teardown is how we look at brands sitting on a real range they are under-monetising. Find us at powerlaw.in.

Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential12 / 12

Bee Creative — The Amazon Teardown: One Product, ₹28L/Month, and the ₹12L It's Leaking

Brand context
Bee Creative
Metal home & garden decor · Moradabad
Powerlaw
Founder Report · June 2026
Prepared for the founder · Bee Creative

The best-looking plant stand on Amazon is leaking ₹12L every month — window closes in 90 days.

Est. Amazon GMV
₹28L
/ month · our estimate
Cost of waiting
₹12L
/ month · doesn't come back
Productive ASINs
6 / 154
~4% of catalog earns
Hero rank
#151
Plant Stands
92% of revenue sits in 3 near-identical listings
Executive Highlight · 30-second read
  • 1One product carries the brand — ~₹28L/mo, and 92% of it is one 6-tier stand split across three ASINs at BSR #151.
  • 2The upside is consolidation, not new products — merging the split listings + capturing reviews can reach ~₹46L/mo.
  • 3The risk is authority moving — TrustBasket & a same-format clone bank reviews while ours fragment across duplicates.
  • 4The compounding move — consolidate the 6-tier family into one listing + a review-velocity program.
  • 5The bottom line — the #151 position is real; the fragmentation is what is leaking it, and it is fixable in 90 days.
02Business fundamentals
03Catalog architecture
04The fragmented hero
05Competitive map
06Off-Amazon flywheel
07Paid & demand
0890-day plan
09Financial scenarios
10Risk map
11Honest disclosure
12The ask
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential01 / 12
Revenue picture
02 · Business fundamentals

One product is doing the work of an entire brand

Est. GMV / mo
₹28L
range ₹26–32L
Est. units / mo
~2,800
one SKU family
Earning categories
1 / 19
Plant Stands only
Avg price
₹999
mid-market
A BSR of #151 on a ₹999 stand is a real position most brands take two years to reach. The problem isn't demand — it's that the demand is split, undefended, and under-monetised.
The math of waiting. We estimate ₹12L/month is leaking right now: the 6-tier stand's reviews and rank divide across three duplicate listings instead of compounding on one (a twin sits at BSR #766 vs #151); ratings aren't captured, so the listing converts below potential; and ~148 dead ASINs absorb attention. None of this is a demand problem — it's structure, and structure compounds. Hold it another quarter and that ₹12L accrues while a rival banks the reviews you didn't.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential02 / 12
Catalog mapped
03 · Catalog architecture

Six listings earn. The other ~148 are noise.

Each square is one live ASIN. Coloured = earning revenue.
Earning (6)Dormant / dead (~148)
19 categories carry ~154 ASINs; only Plant Stands earns. Name Plaques (19), Desktop Calendars (34), Flower Pots, Wall art — all zero on Amazon.
The single biggest clean-up in the account: prune the dead weight, concentrate behind the one product that sells.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential03 / 12
Listing audit
04 · The fragmented hero

One product, sold three times, competing with itself

The same 6-tier, 7-pot stand lives on three separate ASINs — two named "Bee Creative", one "Trendy Decor". Reviews and rank split instead of compounding; one twin has already slipped to BSR #766.
Highest-ROI single fix. Consolidate B09SBLJXN7, B0BTBTKHP8, B0BZLLZD61 into one parent-child family. ~1,600 units/month and their reviews concentrate onto one ASIN — conversion and rank rise together. No new product, no new budget.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential04 / 12
Competitors mapped
05 · Competitive map

TrustBasket owns authority. A clone owns your format.

Position by price (x) and review authority (y). Bubble size = relative presence.
Bee Creative wins on design but sits low on authority because reviews fragment. B08XZSFTTP ("ultimate twist") copies the exact 6-tier format; B081X4QZDW (TrustBasket) leads on trust signals, not looks.
The math of waiting. Review authority is a one-way ratchet. TrustBasket and the clone accumulate reviews on single consolidated listings every week; Bee Creative splits its flow across three duplicates, so effective review velocity is a fraction of what ~1,600 units/month should earn. Once a rival crosses a few thousand reviews on the head term, it becomes a structural CPC premium you pay forever. The cheapest review you'll ever earn is the one you consolidate this month.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential05 / 12
Off-Amazon gap
06 · Off-Amazon flywheel

There is no flywheel yet — which is the opportunity

Marketplace-only seller: no D2C site, no verified brand social. The one lit segment — in-house Moradabad manufacturing — means every incremental unit carries full margin to fund growth.
Strategic implication. Most brands are asked to fix a leaky flywheel; Bee Creative hasn't built one, so the first turns are pure upside. Sequence: win the Amazon hero first, then a single brand identity + Instagram that feeds the listing, then D2C. The factory is the quiet advantage — growth funds itself from product margin.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential06 / 12
Ad readiness
07 · Paid & demand

Strong organic pull, no ad engine — that's a gift

A #151 rank is largely organic. Paid spend would amplify a listing that already converts — but only after consolidation, so budget doesn't move customers between your own duplicates.
Order is fixed: consolidate the hero, capture reviews, then let Sponsored Products amplify a single well-reviewed listing. Same rupee of spend works far harder.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential07 / 12
90-day plan
08 · 90-day plan

Consolidate → capture reviews → amplify → expand

The math of waiting. Phase 1 is consolidating the three duplicate 6-tier listings. Every week it slips, the hero keeps splitting ~400 units of weekly demand and its reviews across three ASINs — we estimate that fragmentation alone costs ~₹3L/week in foregone rank-and-conversion lift, plus the 7–12 consolidated reviews/week never banked. Phase 1 delay has a fixed weekly price that doesn't come back.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential08 / 12
Financial model
09 · Financial scenarios

From ~₹28L to ₹46L/month without a new product

Base case: consolidation + review velocity + disciplined Sponsored Products. Incremental paid ROAS modelled at 4.8×. No new SKUs required.
Read the base case. The jump isn't a growth bet — it's recovery of revenue the current structure leaks. ~two-thirds of the lift comes from consolidation and reviews (near-zero marginal cost given the in-house factory); only the final third leans on paid. The aggressive case is where new investment buys new revenue.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential09 / 12
Risk map
10 · Risk map

What could go wrong, plotted by impact × likelihood

Top-right = act first. SKU concentration and review fragmentation are the two that compound — each maps to Phase 1–2 of the plan.
The math of waiting · compounded. The top two risks multiply: every month the 6-tier family stays fragmented, the brand carries full SKU-concentration exposure and falls further behind on the review ratchet. Fixing it now is cheap and reversible; fixing it after a rival locks the head term means buying back rank through paid spend indefinitely — roughly 3–4× more expensive.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential10 / 12
Candid
11 · Honest disclosure

Every load-bearing number, with its confidence

You asked us not to hit Amazon's product pages directly — so a few visual-listing fields were not read live.
High = read directly. Medium = our estimate. Directional = not surfaced without a live Amazon read (hero rating/review count, A+ / image / video / coupon). All sharpen in a pilot.
Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential11 / 12
The ask
12 · The ask

90 days to consolidate the hero and close the leak

The opportunity. Almost two-thirds of the lift comes from consolidation and reviews — near-zero marginal cost for an in-house manufacturer. The position already works; the structure is what is leaking it.

If you are solving this kind of problem on Amazon

This teardown is how we look at brands sitting on a real position they are under-monetising. Find us at powerlaw.in.

Powerlaw · powerlaw.in · Confidential12 / 12

Self-Evaluation Is a Trap. Use an Adversary Instead.

A year ago, Claude could barely string together a few bash commands without getting tangled in its own escapes. Today, almost all of Claude Code is written by Claude Code, and the agent can run productively for days at a stretch. The model got better, yes. But the bigger unlock is the harness — the scaffolding around the model that lets it survive context rot, lazy self-judgment, and the slow drift that ruins long runs.

Ash Prabaker and Andrew Wilson from Anthropic's Applied AI team walked through how that harness actually works. The summary is short and worth memorising.

Three things break long-running agents. Context windows are finite, so models develop "context anxiety" near the end and rush. They are mediocre at planning, so they half-build features and stop. And — most damaging — they are terrible at judging their own output. A model will look at a button with no backend behind it and confidently declare the feature done.

Throwing one model at all three problems is what most people do. It is the wrong shape.

The fix is adversarial. Split the work into three roles, each with its own context window and its own system prompt.

  • Planner — takes a one-line ask ("build a retro game maker") and converts it into a high-level spec. Not granular technical details — those cascade errors. Just the outer lines of what the product should be.
  • Generator — writes the code.
  • Evaluator — opens the live app in Playwright, clicks around, screenshots, grades against an explicit rubric, and hands back a critique.

The clever bit is the contract. Before the generator writes a line, it negotiates with the evaluator over a markdown file on disk: I will build X, and you will verify it by testing Y. The evaluator pushes back — too vague, missing edge cases, scope too big — until they agree. Then build starts. Then the evaluator grades against the contract the two of them wrote, not the original spec.

This sounds like a PM/IC/QA team. That is exactly the point. Anthropic did not invent the pattern. They just gave each role its own clean context.

But if the evaluator is also an LLM, why doesn't it rubber-stamp everything? Because tuning a standalone critic to be harsh is tractable. Tuning a generator to be self-critical is not. Same gap as humans — it is easy to critique a meal, much harder to cook one. The harness exploits that gap.

The proof is a "build a retro game maker" prompt run two ways. Solo Claude Code produced something that looked fine on the opening screen — palette, canvas, frame timeline — but the moment you pressed an arrow key in play mode, nothing happened. No physics loop. No collisions. The model had no idea what playing a game actually meant.

Run the same prompt through the planner/generator/evaluator harness for six hours and $200. It named itself RetroForge. It generated a 54-colour palette. It built an AI level-assistant — a feature the prompt never mentioned, that the planner decided products like this should have. Play mode actually worked: physics, collisions, a debug HUD in the corner with live numbers because the evaluator needed those numbers to test the game. The evaluator caught FastAPI route-ordering bugs that pass unit tests but break in prod. Twenty-seven contract criteria, every one of them granular enough to be actionable.

The harness was the entire difference.

A few rules that fall out of all this:

  • You can grade taste. Most people say you can't, so they don't try. Anthropic writes a rubric — design, originality, craft, functionality, weighted by which model is in play — and shows the evaluator reference images of "this is good" and "this is AI slop." Taste converges on whoever sets the rubric. Stop pretending subjective quality is ungradable.
  • Compaction is not coherence. Lossy summaries drift. Structured handoffs through files on disk beat shoving everything into one context window.
  • The pivot is the magic. A single Claude Code session keeps patching the same broken thing. A generator/evaluator pair will throw the whole codebase away after ten failed passes and start clean. That is something the generator alone almost never does about its own work.
  • The harness evolves as the model does. Sonnet 3.7 needed aggressive context resetting and forced sprint decomposition. Opus 4.6 holds two-hour continuous builds coherently and didn't need either. The right question is not "is harness design dead?" — it is "which scaffolding can I delete this model generation?"
  • Read the traces by hand. Not summaries. Not dashboards. The actual logs. Empathising with what the model saw is the only way to know where its judgment diverged from yours. Then tune the prompt for exactly that gap.

The unsexy meta-lesson is that the frontier of agent design is not the model. It is the willingness to write down what "done" means in granular, harsh, opinionated detail — and to let two instances of the same model fight each other over whether you got there.

Self-evaluation is a trap. Use an adversary.

Source: Build Agents That Run for Hours (Without Losing the Plot) — Ash Prabaker & Andrew Wilson, Anthropic

Sunday, 14 June 2026

Founders Who Outsource Sales Are Outsourcing Their Company

Most early-stage founders avoid sales the same way most kids avoid eating vegetables — they invent elaborate reasons why it doesn't apply to them. The product needs more work. The website isn't ready. The market is wrong. The Google ads will kick in any day now. None of this is true. The reason your startup isn't taking off is that you, the founder, have not yet decided to sit down and sell it.

This was Gustaf Alstromer's point in a YC lecture I just watched, and it's worth repeating because it lands the same way every time: startups don't take off by themselves. Startups take off because founders make them take off. Pushing a button on an ad network is not customer acquisition. Writing more code is not customer acquisition. Recruiting your first hundred customers is a hands-on, manual, occasionally humiliating job — and it has to be yours.

Two things break the moment you outsource sales:

You stop learning what to build. Talking to customers and selling to them are two faces of the same coin. If you've never tried to sell your product, you do not actually know whether it's good. You just know it compiles. The first salesperson you hire will be three months late discovering that your pitch doesn't land — and they'll quit before they tell you.

You stop owning your destiny. Sales has to be DNA, not a department. Until you can close a customer yourself, you have no idea what good looks like, which means you have no basis to hire for it.

The Brex founders are the textbook example. Winter 2017 YC batch. They didn't have a real product yet — just a virtual credit card. They emailed their batchmates a six-line message: "Hey, we're opening up our beta for the W17 batch. 10 spots. Brex is a corporate credit card focused on technology companies. We don't require a personal guarantee. It's free — merchants pay us." That's it. Henrique personally onboarded every single customer. No mobile app, no marketing site, no SDR team. Just the founder, the email, and the willingness to do the work himself.

The email worked because it followed rules that are now well-known and still ignored:

  • Six to eight sentences. Maximum. If you're coming out of academia, your instinct will be to write 400 words. Don't. Nobody reads them.
  • Plain text. No HTML. No drawings. Write it like you'd write to a friend.
  • Say who you are and why you matter. Show, don't tell. "We're in YC" beats "we're domain experts with 12 years of experience."
  • Address the problem the recipient actually has. Not your product's features.
  • One ask. A demo, a call, a self-serve link. Pick one.

Then comes the part nobody wants to hear. Sales is a numbers game. You cannot close five customers from ten leads. Not in early-stage B2B. Not ever. The funnel math is brutal: 500 outbound emails → 250 opens → 20 replies → 10 demos → 2 customers. If those numbers feel humbling, good. They are.

The mistake almost every founder makes is sending 100 emails, closing zero, and concluding "sales doesn't work for us — let's try SEO." This is not a strategic insight. This is statistical illiteracy. You didn't fail at sales. You ran one-fifth of the experiment and gave up. Most of the people you emailed aren't early adopters and never will be — that's the population, not your fault. To find early adopters, you have to email enough strangers that the rare yes shows up. That's the whole game.

Two more rules that separate founders who close from founders who don't:

Your first customers should be your easiest, not your most prestigious. Sell to people you already know. Sell to other startups, not enterprises — startups have short decision cycles and no procurement team. Don't bite off the hardest deal in the pipeline because it would look impressive on the deck. You don't need impressive. You need ten customers.

Charge from day one. Free trials and unpaid pilots feel like de-risking, but a customer who hasn't paid you isn't a customer. They're a polite acquaintance. The money is the signal. If your prospect refuses to pay when you bring up price, fire them gently and move on — that's the qualification call doing its job. In B2B, replace free trials with a money-back guarantee or a monthly opt-out. Same de-risk for the buyer, but you're getting paid.

Here's what this all collapses down to:

You will not find product-market fit by thinking harder. You will find it by emailing 500 strangers, having ten awful demos, closing two, and learning everything you didn't know about your buyer in the process. There is no shortcut. There is no automation. There is no growth hack that substitutes for the founder picking up the phone.

If you're not doing this, you're not running a startup. You're maintaining a science project that happens to have a Stripe account.

Source: Founder-Led Sales — Gustaf Alstromer, Y Combinator

Saturday, 13 June 2026

Selling to Startups Isn't the Easy Path. It's the Best Path.

Every founder eventually hears the advice: sell to startups first, not enterprises. It usually gets explained in the most boring way possible — short sales cycles, less bureaucracy, you can find the decision-maker on LinkedIn. All true. All surface-level. The real reasons selling to startups beats selling to enterprises run much deeper, and once you see them, the conventional wisdom that "real money is in enterprise" starts to look like the strategic mistake it is for most early-stage companies.

Start here: the startup customer self-qualifies for free.

Every startup that responds to your cold email has already passed four filters you'd otherwise spend months testing for. They move fast. They pay. They try new things. They have decision authority. You didn't filter them — they filtered themselves by replying. Enterprise leads pass none of these filters until you've burned 90 days finding out which of them was actually serious. The startup pool is pre-sorted; the enterprise pool is not.

Second: there is no incumbent to displace.

Enterprises have vendors. Three-year contracts, exclusive deals, internal champions defending the existing system, switching costs, integrations to rip out. Startups are running on Notion, spreadsheets, WhatsApp, and the cofounder's gut. Your tool is replacing nothing — pure greenfield. You don't have to be 10x better than an incumbent. You just have to be better than chaos. That's a much lower bar than founders give themselves credit for.

Third: startups feel pain acutely; enterprises feel pain diffusely.

A four-person team with no ops person feels every minute of manual work — it directly steals the founder's evening. A 50,000-person enterprise has someone whose actual job is to absorb that pain. Nobody screams. Pain that nobody screams about doesn't generate purchases. Pain that ruins someone's evening generates purchases by tomorrow morning. This single dynamic explains why early-stage SaaS sells faster to startups than to anyone else.

Fourth: founders want to be discovered as smart.

This is psychology, not economics, and it might be the single most underrated lever in the whole game. Founders love being the one who found the new tool. It signals taste, network access, being ahead of the curve. They'll tweet about you, mention you on podcasts, drop your name at YC dinners. Enterprise buyers have the exact opposite psychology — they want to not be blamed. Their dream is "industry standard, nobody got fired for buying it." Your job selling to startups is to make a founder look smart for choosing you. That's a much easier job than making a procurement officer feel safe.

Fifth: distribution is bundled into the customer.

Founders talk to other founders constantly. WhatsApp groups, Slack communities, accelerator cohorts, demo days, group chats from their last startup. One happy founder customer becomes a referral machine for the next five years. Enterprise buyers don't socialize with peer buyers across companies — there's competitive paranoia. Your customer at Goldman is not telling JP Morgan about you. Your customer at one YC company is telling 50 other YC founders this weekend.

Sixth, and this is the compounding one: you don't sell once. You sell to one company that grows into fifty.

This is the Stripe, Twilio, Vercel, Notion pattern. A five-person startup pays you $50 a month. Eighteen months later it's fifty people paying $1,000 a month. You did zero new sales work — net dollar retention above 120 percent from cohort growth alone. With enterprises, the company you sold to in Year 1 is the same size in Year 5. Sometimes smaller. Selling to startups means you're indirectly long the entire startup ecosystem's growth — and historically that compounds at around 25 percent a year. You're not just acquiring customers. You're buying equity-like exposure to the next decade of company formation.

Seventh: the economics work at small ACVs.

Enterprise sales math forces you to need $20K-plus annual contracts because the sales cycle eats six months, the solutions engineer eats 100 hours, the security review eats three months, the custom legal eats a month, and the pilot eats a quarter. None of that exists for startups. Self-serve onboard, Stripe pays you, chat is support, done. You can build a real business at $50 a month per customer — which means you can charge much less, win on price, and still make great margins. That's a moat enterprise-focused competitors literally cannot match.

Eighth: brutal, instant feedback.

A startup customer tells you within hours when something is broken, sometimes with a patch. Enterprise feedback comes in a quarterly survey that nobody fills out, then via account exec who's been told three layers down. Selling to startups compresses your product iteration cycle by 5–10x in the years that matter most.

Ninth: risk is distributed, not concentrated.

Yes, some of your startup customers will die. But $500 a month gone is a Tuesday. Losing a $200K enterprise contract is a board-level event that reshapes your strategy. Selling to many small customers is structurally lower-risk than selling to a few big ones, even though the conventional wisdom says the opposite. Diversification works in customer portfolios the same way it works in stock portfolios.

Tenth: startups are co-builders, not adversaries.

A bug at an enterprise becomes a Jira ticket, a ServiceNow incident, a procurement escalation. A bug at a startup gets you a Slack DM that says "yo this is broken btw" with a screenshot. Your startup customers will help you build the product. Enterprises pay you to have already built it.

Now the caveat that keeps this honest:

Selling to startups only works if you can survive the volume math. You need to reach hundreds of them to find tens that pay. If your product economics require $5K+ ACV from day one, this strategy collapses — the startup pool can't pay that. So this is genuinely the right answer for self-serve, low-touch, horizontal SaaS, and the wrong answer for $250K enterprise platforms.

But for most early-stage founders building software for other software people, selling to startups isn't just the easiest market. It's structurally the highest-quality one. They self-qualify, they evangelize, they grow your contract for you, and they tell you when you're wrong. Enterprises do none of those things and charge you a year of your life for the privilege of finding out.

The boring version of this advice is "startups are easier customers." The real version is: startups are the only customers whose interests are structurally aligned with yours. You both want to grow fast. You both don't care about process. You both will die if you don't ship. That alignment is rare in B2B, and you should not waste the early years of your company selling to people who don't share it.

Friday, 12 June 2026

One Brand Per Category. Rank #1 in 90 Days.

Powerlaw
Amazon Category Dominance · For Founder-Led D2C
Positioning
One-Pager
2026
Powerlaw takes one brand per category to Rank #1 in 90 days on Amazon — paid only on the growth we create.
The Promise
Rank #1 in your category within 90 days — or we don’t stop until you’re there.
No extra cost. We only earn on the growth anyway — so our clock and your clock are the same clock.
RANK #1
90
Days · Guaranteed
Who it’s for: Indian, founder-led D2C brands already doing ≥ ₹10K/day on Amazon with real category headroom — brands big enough to win, not yet winning.
The Offer — Four Locks

1 One brand per category

We work with only one brand in your category. Your competitor cannot hire us. That exclusivity means we are all-in on making you the monopoly in your space.

2 Rank #1 in 90 days

A hard outcome, not a hope. Miss the 90-day mark and we keep working free until you hit it. The guarantee is credible because the pricing is pure performance.

3 3% of incremental GMV

Baseline = your Amazon GMV in the last full month before we start. You pay 3% only on GMV above that baseline, every month, for as long as we manage the account. Nothing on the baseline, ever.

4 Zero downside

No retainer. No setup fee. No lock-in. Miss the baseline, you pay ₹0. The only way we earn is by making you earn more.

We take a limited number of categories — one brand each. Once your category is taken, it’s taken.

Why we can promise Rank #1

A daily category-level operating system — every ASIN, reviewed every single day. Founder-grade diagnostics, not monthly decks. We run the account like owners, because on this model we effectively are.

Proof

Already running live across brands in kitchen, home, wellness, textiles and fashion — managed daily, not quarterly.

The Path

Founder Report — your Amazon teardown 30-minute call Start a pilot on 3% of incremental

No commitment until you’ve seen us read your own business back to you.

Powerlaw
+91 74282 08889
powerlaw.in · certainty.co.in