My name is Iryna Manukovska. I’ve spent the last 20 years launching initiatives, starting with the first drag racing championship in Ukraine in 2005 and helping to deliver startup babies across AI, Deep Tech, and Enterprise Tech since 2018. I’ve laid my marketing arms on more than 50 startups in Europe and the USA as a part-time, full-time marketer, advisor, or mentor. I've watched 50 startups burn money on fancy websites whilst their ideal customers can't explain what the hell they do. What I share below is a typical QA session I have with any founder I meet, and my expertise condensed into the length of a Hackernoon blog post.
While the corporate world builds marketing ecosystems, founders should first ask themselves who they are building a product for. If you are still getting an answer like “I was struggling with this all the time at my old workplace” or “I was dreaming of having this throughout my career”, it's a red flag that you are missing real customer insights and feedback. And that’s where your marketing starts. Not with a fancy website, blockbuster promotional video, offer deck, or paid advertising.
You’ve probably read this one at least 100 times. And you really think you’ve done the homework, but you still receive this feedback from investors during pitch competitions. Here is the psychology behind startuping: most founders are too deeply in love with their ideas, unable to see weaknesses, threats, or manage controversial and growth feedback. If you are building a product to help others, not to boost your ego, keep reading to learn how to run your customer interviews before developing your first MVP.
There is an excellent book, "The Mom Test," written by Rob Fitzpatrick in 2013, which covers how to extract genuine feedback from customers. Rob is a seasoned entrepreneur with raising and scaling experience in the US and the UK, who has struggled to understand customers, so he has written one of the best practical guides on his own.
The core idea is that you shouldn't ask anyone—not just your mom—whether your business idea is good, at least not in those direct words; instead, fish out real feedback with a set of rules:
Stop pitching, start asking. The first rule is to avoid pitching your idea and instead focus on understanding your customer's problems, experiences, and how they currently solve challenges.
The moment you present your idea, people shift into protection mode; they want to protect your feelings and will likely agree politely rather than give honest feedback, or they simply start to judge and disagree. It's an unconscious reaction like freeze or flight. By keeping the conversation centered on their life, problems, and experiences, you allow them to share truthfully without the pressure of validating your specific solution to a problem and the problem itself.
Bad question: "Do you think this is a good idea?"
Good question: "How do you currently solve this problem?" or "Tell me about the last time you faced this challenge."
Stop playing with a crystal ball. Ask questions grounded in past experiences rather than hypothetical future scenarios. People are naturally overly optimistic about what they might do in the future, but their past actions are solid facts.
When you ask someone what they would do or would pay for something hypothetical, they often give you what they think is the "right" answer rather than what they'd actually do. That’s why a lot of focus on ground studies has failed. Past behavior is far more reliable than future intentions when it comes to exploring systematic problems.
Bad questions:
Good questions:
When you are in love, it’s hard to stop dreaming and talking about your passion. However, it’s critical if you are seeking real feedback, not a reassuring wording. The more you talk about your idea, the more you bias customer responses.
Active listening is key: ask open-ended questions and give people space to tell their stories. By listening more than talking, customers naturally reveal their problems and priorities without pressure from your own agenda.
Moreover, you begin to build relationships and establish trust, which can be crucial for future success in startups.
Here is a draft of the easy potential customer interview you can handle.
I launched Ukraine's first drag racing championship in 2005. One thing I learned: race cars strip away everything unnecessary. Off-road vehicles have clearance and winches. F1 cars have massive engines. Kart cars sit millimetres from the road. Each is built for its specific goal.
Early-stage startups need the same mindset for marketing.
I've watched founders burn $10k on websites their customers never visit. I've sat through hours-long brand book debates about logo colours whilst the company has zero customer conversations scheduled. Corporations can afford this luxury. You can not.
Your customer interviews from "The Mum Test" gave you problems. Now find where people are actively discussing these problems using AI deep research tool:
Spend one week just listening. Screenshot the language they use. Note the satellite problems around the main pain point.
Don't guess where to show up. Look at where your competitors are already winning, it’s a red zone needs investment:
What are they missing? Thinktanks? Podcasts? TikTok?
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You can't out-spend established competitors, but you can out-position them. Ask yourself across these eight areas:
Attunement to the customer is fundamental for any product, service, and relationship. Cause all we build, we build to decrease their pain with our solution. It is just as simple as this. Whether it is a service-based business or startup, the situation during my consultancy, I see the same problem - the product or service is created for C-level suit or founders, their vision, and their pain points in previous years. And this is not gonna work; the customer would not pay for this.
I like the idea of Daniel Pink - leaving a free chair during the meetings for the customer avatar. In Ogilvy, we have named customers and asked ourselves, "Would Betty use this?"
Don't forget to invite customers to your meetings and processes; your business is built for them.
Starting marketing day one means not disclosing how you build, but engaging in why you build is important. LinkedIn is free to use and allows you to find early adopters and first customers before advertising. Build your weekly content calendar around customer trigger points
Map these triggers, then create content around them:
Keep the "Would Betty use this?" test from Ogilvy in mind. Betty is your customer avatar. If Betty wouldn't care, don't post it.
Not sure what to write about? Use the 7P1R framework, which helps to identify every possible distinction feature and unfair advantage your product have.
Many founders are seeking someone to handle marketing for them. While we can’t be a C-level executive in every area as founders, we are the primary brand ambassadors of what we are building. Despite imposture, shyness, and a lack of time, we engage investors, partners, and customers in the early days, so practicing pitching and storytelling is crucial to convey that our problem is significant enough to invest in and our solution is effective enough to solve it.
The CAPS Storytelling Framework
I use this for every pitch, LinkedIn post, and customer presentation. It's based on how people actually rewire minds. CAPS works because each stage primes the next - you hook attention with a problem they recognise, prove you've lived it, show the gap competitors can't fill, then lock in the new behaviour through a story they can feel in their body.
Apply This to Your Founder Story:
Instead of: "I struggled with this at my old workplace, so I built a solution"
Try:
Early-stage marketing is similar to playing with your toddler's LEGOs, mixed up in one box, rather than accurately building sets; you try to build what you need with what you have. You need both knowledge of what works and hands-on experience on how to implement, as at this stage, there is no team behind you. When recruiting experienced C-suite team members, ask them what they plan to do and how they intend to implement it, step by step. If they speak about the importance of doing (corporate slang) more than actionable deliverables (we need to build, to run…), it is a red flag that you may have a lot of great discussions and inspo with no actions behind.
Hiring a junior is not a good fit either, as most early-stage founders lack the luxury of teaching others and often also lack marketing experience. A middle/senior person may be the perfect combination of skills and experience you are looking for.
Consider hiring fewer corporate personnel, as they are more process-driven than result-driven - the essence of corporate effectiveness and scale is the support of existing processes in place. Corporate people used to do less with more; you need the opposite.
Ask these 4 questions. Listen for specifics, not corporate waffle:
1. "You have $3,000, 90 days, and zero brand awareness. Walk me through your first week."
2. "Show me something you've built yourself. Not managed. Built."
3. "What's the last marketing thing you did that completely failed? What did you learn?"
4. "Here's our customer interview notes. What would you post on LinkedIn Monday morning?"
There is an uncomfortable truth: no one can really do marketing for a founder of an early-stage company. The reason for this is that an early-stage venture is a living and breathing entity with a somewhat unclear vision inside a founder's head. Without a clear understanding and framing of what, to whom you sell, and what it is better than alternatives, any marketing effort would be a pure learning experience, not a business one
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