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#37 — Your first B2C customers (Marketplace Edition)

December 21, 20242 min read

#37 — Your first B2C customers (Marketplace Edition)

Note: This is a follow-up to a previous note on your first 100 B2C customers.

Why it matters: New platform businesses face a chicken-and-egg problem - you need both service providers and customers, but which do you get first?

The big picture: Research on Uber, Airbnb, and Etsy reveals a clear pattern: focus on the supply side first (the "eggs"), then focus on highly targeted acquisition before scaling.

Three key strategies that work

1. Focus on supply first

  • Airbnb hacked Craigslist to extract property owner contacts, then pitched them to list on their platform
  • Uber started with professional black car drivers to ensure quality service
  • Etsy scouted craft fairs nationwide to identify and recruit top-tier artisans

2. Create exceptional experiences

  • Airbnb hired professional photographers for property listings - an unscalable but necessary step
  • Uber began with premium black cars to guarantee quality before expanding to Uber X
  • Quality suppliers lead to positive word-of-mouth, turning customers into marketers

3. Launch strategically

  • Target cities and times with high demand and low supply
  • Uber launched during holidays and major events when taxi demand exceeded supply
  • Airbnb expanded to cities hosting conventions when hotel rooms were scarce
  • This approach attracts early adopters who are more forgiving of initial flaws

Reality check: Your first 100 customers require different strategies than your next 100,000. Word-of-mouth works initially, but scaling requires more proactive digital marketing approaches.

Bottom line: Get the right suppliers first, ensure quality experiences, and launch where demand exceeds supply. This creates the foundation for sustainable growth.

More than just words

Don't fumble in the dark. Your ICPs have the words. We find them.

Strategic messaging isn't marketing fluff—it's the difference between burning cash on ads that don't convert and building a growth engine that scales.