go-to-market strategy Archives - Global Travel Noteshttps://dulichbaolocaz.com/tag/go-to-market-strategy/Sharing real travel experiences worldwideMon, 06 Apr 2026 12:11:06 +0000en-UShourly1https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3Meet 9,000 other SaaS Founders at the FREE SaaStr University!https://dulichbaolocaz.com/meet-9000-other-saas-founders-at-the-free-saastr-university/https://dulichbaolocaz.com/meet-9000-other-saas-founders-at-the-free-saastr-university/#respondMon, 06 Apr 2026 12:11:06 +0000https://dulichbaolocaz.com/?p=11925Want to meet thousands of SaaS founders and learn how to scale fasterwithout paying a dime? This guide breaks down what SaaStr University is, what you’ll learn (GTM, fundraising, scaling, and the metrics that actually matter), and how to use the community to solve real problems like churn, pipeline, pricing, and hiring. You’ll get practical playbooks, conversation starters for networking without being awkward, and a founder-friendly metrics cheat sheet so you can talk traction like a pro. If you’re tired of random advice and ready for structured learning plus peer feedback loops, start here.

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Building a SaaS company can feel like you’re assembling IKEA furniture in the dark: you’re pretty sure the parts are here, the instructions are “somewhere,” and you’re one wrong turn away from inventing a brand-new Swedish word for “why is churn doing that?”

That’s the real pitch behind SaaStr University: don’t build alone. Learn faster, swap notes with other founders, and get a structured path through the messiest parts of B2B SaaSgo-to-market, fundraising, metrics, and scalingwithout paying tuition that costs more than your first year of AWS.

What Is SaaStr University (and Why Are So Many Founders There)?

SaaStr University is a free learning-and-community hub built around practical SaaS lessons, founder-to-founder tactics, and a “show your work” mindset. The appeal is simple: it’s hard to know what “good” looks like when you’re living inside your own dashboard all day.

The “meet 9,000 founders” idea isn’t just marketing sparkleit’s a signal that thousands of builders want the same thing: real examples, real numbers, and real conversations about what actually works at each stage of SaaS.

What you can expect (no magical thinking required)

  • Structured learning: lessons organized into tracks/courses so you’re not doom-scrolling random threads at midnight.
  • Founder community: a place to compare notes with people who understand your exact flavor of “why is pipeline down?”
  • Practical templates: how to think about pricing, retention, sales hiring, fundraising, and scaling ops as you grow.

Why “9,000 Founders” Matters More Than the Number Itself

The number is cool. The density of useful perspective is cooler. A big founder community helps because SaaS problems repeatjust at different price points. Someone out there is already solving the exact thing you’re stuck on, whether it’s your first enterprise deal, your first painful churn spike, or the moment you realize “founder-led sales” is not a lifestyle brand.

Three things a founder community does that your analytics tool can’t

  1. Compresses your learning curve: You can skip a few expensive mistakes by hearing what broke for others (and why).
  2. Normalizes the hard parts: When you see other founders wrestling with the same issues, you stop assuming you’re uniquely doomed.
  3. Improves decision quality: Not by giving you “answers,” but by giving you better questions and sharper benchmarks.

What You’ll Learn: The “Founders Actually Use This” Curriculum

SaaS education gets weird fast. Half the internet teaches you to “10x growth” with one neat trick, and the other half sells you a course called Become a Unicorn By Tuesday. SaaStr University leans tactical: the kind of lessons you can apply directly to your next week of work.

1) Go-to-market that doesn’t depend on vibes

Early-stage GTM is basically controlled chaos: you’re testing channels, tightening positioning, and trying not to confuse “interest” with “intent.” Expect lessons that help you think clearly about ICP, pricing/packaging, sales motion, and what to measure when the sample size is tiny.

2) Fundraising and investor readiness (without the cringe)

The best founders don’t raise by being “great at fundraising.” They raise by building a business that is easy to believe. That means learning what investors typically ask for (traction clarity, retention, efficient acquisition, and a coherent story), and how to present your numbers without hiding behind a 47-slide “vision deck.”

3) Scaling: from scrappy to steady

Scaling is not just “more leads.” It’s building repeatability: sales process, onboarding, customer success, hiring, and management systems. It’s also the moment you realize your calendar is now a productbecause it’s the only thing you can’t raise a Series A to buy more of.

4) Metrics that keep you honest

SaaS is the land of recurring revenue, which means the game is never “win once.” The game is “win, keep winning, and expand.” That’s why serious SaaS founders obsess over retention, expansion, and customer acquisition efficiency.

The Founder Networking Playbook: How to “Meet 9,000 Founders” Without Being Weird

Networking gets a bad reputation because people do it like they’re speed-running LinkedIn. But founder networking done right is just problem-solving with strangers who quickly become allies.

Bring one of these three conversation starters

  • The metric: “We’re at $25k MRR, churn is 3.5% monthly. What did you do first to push retention down?”
  • The decision: “We’re debating PLG vs sales-led. What was the tell that made the choice obvious for you?”
  • The constraint: “We have one engineer and two founders. What did you stop doing to focus on the highest leverage work?”

Make it easy for people to help you

The fastest way to get useful advice is to show your context. Don’t ask “How do I grow?” Ask: “We sell to X, our ACV is Y, our sales cycle is Z, and here’s what we tried. What would you test next?”

The Metrics Cheat Sheet You Should Have Ready (So You Sound Like You Run a Business)

You don’t need to be a CFO to talk like a CEO. You just need a small set of metrics you track consistentlyand understand well enough to explain. Here are the ones that come up constantly in serious SaaS circles:

MRR and ARR: your recurring revenue foundation

MRR is the predictable recurring revenue you generate monthly. ARR is the annualized view. These are useful because they help you forecast, compare growth over time, and communicate traction clearly.

Churn: the leak in your bucket

Churn measures what you losecustomers and/or revenueover a period. If you’re growing but churn is high, you’re basically running up the down escalator. (Fun cardio. Bad business.)

Net Revenue Retention (NRR): expansion tells the truth

NRR asks: “From the customers we already have, did revenue go up or down over time after churn and expansion?” Strong NRR often signals product value, successful onboarding, and room for account expansion.

CAC Payback: how quickly your GTM engine pays you back

CAC payback tells you how long it takes to recover the cost of acquiring a customer. It’s a simple question with serious consequences: “Are we buying growth efficiently, or lighting money on fire with a branded matchstick?”

Rule of 40 (and friends): balancing growth and profitability

The classic Rule of 40 combines growth rate and profit margin to evaluate whether you’re growing efficiently. It’s not a law of physics, but it’s a common benchmark founders and investors use to talk about “healthy” scaling.

How to Use SaaStr University Like a High-Performing Founder (Not a Content Hoarder)

The internet is great at giving you more information than you can ever apply. The trick is to learn in a way that changes your behavior. Here’s a practical way to do that:

Step 1: Pick one growth problem for the next 30 days

  • Improve activation and onboarding completion
  • Reduce churn in your core segment
  • Increase conversion from demo to close
  • Raise seed/Series A with a clearer metrics story

Step 2: Learn, then ship

For every lesson you consume, create one tangible output: a revised pricing page, a new onboarding email sequence, a churn-reduction experiment, a tighter pitch narrative, a refined ICP doc, or a more honest dashboard.

Step 3: Use the community for feedback loops

Post your experiment plan, ask for critiques, compare benchmarks, and learn what “good” looks like at your stage. This is where “9,000 founders” becomes a real advantage: not because everyone is right, but because patterns emerge.

How SaaStr University Fits Into the Bigger SaaStr Ecosystem

SaaStr isn’t just a course libraryit’s a broader B2B software community that also runs events and live sessions. If you want momentum, mixing structured lessons with live Q&A can help you turn “learning” into decisions.

One practical path looks like this: use SaaStr University for structured fundamentals, then show up to live sessions (workshops, talks, and community discussions) with specific questions from your current stage.

Conclusion: Your Next Step Is Simple (But Not Easy)

If you’re building SaaS, you’re going to face the same recurring set of challenges: finding your ICP, getting GTM to click, keeping churn down, hiring the right leaders, andif you chooseraising capital without losing your mind.

SaaStr University is compelling for one reason: it combines structured learning with a founder community large enough to feel like you’re not alone, but focused enough to stay tactical. Join the discussions, bring your numbers, and trade notes like your runway depends on it (because… it does).

of Founder-Style “Experiences” You’ll Recognize Immediately

Imagine three founders walking into the same community spaceeach at a different stage, each convinced their problem is uniquely cursed. Spoiler: it’s not. It’s just SaaS.

Experience #1: The “We Have Users, But Not Momentum” Week

You’re pre-seed or freshly seeded. The product works. People even say nice things about it. Then comes the hard question: “Why aren’t more people buying?” In founder circles, this is where the conversation becomes refreshingly unglamorous: messaging tests, ICP narrowing, pricing experiments, and pipeline reality checks. You’ll see someone share a before-and-after: same product, new positioning, conversion rate jumps. Not because they “grew a brand,” but because they stopped trying to sell to everyone with a Wi-Fi connection.

Experience #2: The “Churn Is Eating Our Lunch” Spiral

Another founder is further alongreal MRR, real customers, real anxiety. Their churn chart looks like a ski slope, and not the fun kind. They show up asking for “retention advice” and leave with a plan: segment churn (who is leaving?), review onboarding drop-offs, interview lost customers, tighten time-to-value, and fix the promises that sales made when everyone was feeling optimistic. Someone else shares a simple trick: run a “success plan” call at day 7 for new accounts, then measure expansion. Nobody claims it’s magic. It’s just consistent execution that compounds.

Experience #3: The “We Need to Hire Our First Real Leader” Moment

Then there’s the founder who has outgrown their own heroics. They’re still doing too much: sales calls, product decisions, customer escalations, recruiting, and the occasional existential dread. They talk about hiring a VP of Sales or Head of CS. The community doesn’t just say “hire great people.” They ask: “What number will this leader own? What does success look like in 90 days? What will you stop doing?” That’s the kind of advice that saves you from a very expensive mis-hire.

Across all three experiences, the pattern is the same: the best SaaS founders don’t win because they know everything. They win because they build feedback loopslearning, shipping, measuring, and talking to other builders who’ve already stepped on the rake you’re about to step on. SaaStr University is one more place to create those loops, meet peers, and keep moving when the work gets heavy.

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Dear SaaStr: What Are the Top Mistakes You See New Founders Make?https://dulichbaolocaz.com/dear-saastr-what-are-the-top-mistakes-you-see-new-founders-make/https://dulichbaolocaz.com/dear-saastr-what-are-the-top-mistakes-you-see-new-founders-make/#respondFri, 13 Feb 2026 11:27:08 +0000https://dulichbaolocaz.com/?p=4758New founders tend to trip over the same predictable startup mistakes: choosing the wrong cofounder, building before validating real demand, delaying launch, treating go-to-market as a ‘later’ problem, hiring senior titles too early, burning cash on status symbols, and fundraising without a clear milestone plan. This in-depth Dear SaaStr-style guide breaks down the most common failure patterns across product-market fit, sales and marketing execution, recruiting, runway management, and leadership decisions. You’ll get specific examples (like why premature VP hires backfire, how ‘happy ears’ kill pipeline truth, and how one big enterprise deal can hijack your roadmap), plus a practical anti-mistake checklist and of real-world field notes. If you want fewer painful lessons and more compounding progress, start here.

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If you’ve ever watched a brand-new founder try to build a SaaS company, you’ve seen the same movie: a lot of caffeine, a lot of confidence, and a roadmap that looks like it was designed by a raccoon who found a marker. The good news? Most “fatal” mistakes are painfully common, wildly predictable, and fixableif you spot them early.

This is a “Dear SaaStr” style answer in spirit: practical, a little blunt, and focused on what actually derails early startups. We’ll cover the big bucketscofounders, customers, product, go-to-market, hiring, fundraising, and operationsplus concrete examples you can steal (and a few traps you can avoid without learning them the expensive way).

The #1 mistake: Treating your cofounder like a “feature,” not a life decision

Early-stage startups don’t fail in dramatic explosions as often as they fail by slow structural collapse. And nothing is more structural than the founding team. One of the most repeated lessons in founder communities is that choosing the wrong cofounder is a multiplier on every other problemcommunication, decision-making, execution speed, morale, and even basic trust.

Mistake: Picking “available” over “exceptional”

New founders often choose a cofounder the way you choose a group-project partner at 11:57 p.m.whoever is still online. Availability is not a qualification. Skill is. Commitment is. Emotional steadiness is. If you wouldn’t bet your rent on them shipping a critical feature in two weeks, don’t bet your cap table on them for ten years.

Mistake: Skipping the hard conversations (equity, roles, conflict rules)

Many founding relationships break because they avoid “awkward” topics until the awkward topics become lawsuits with calendars. Equity splits, vesting, decision rights, and what happens if someone stops contributing aren’t pessimisticthese are the guardrails that keep the friendship from turning into a reality TV reunion episode.

Example: A technical founder and a sales founder split 50/50 on day one. Six months later, the sales founder realizes enterprise sales is not “DMing buyers on LinkedIn,” disappears for two months, and returns to say they’re “still supportive” (translation: they still want the equity). With vesting and clear expectations, this is a tough conversation. Without them, it’s a meltdown.

Mistake: Building before you’ve earned the right to build

Product is important, sure. But early on, your product is also a question: “Do enough people have this problem badly enough that they’ll change behavior and pay?” New founders often answer that question with code instead of conversations.

Mistake: Falling in love with the solution, not the problem

If your startup pitch sounds like “We use AI to optimize synergy,” you may be suffering from a common condition: Solution-First Syndrome. The cure is simple and annoying: talk to users until you can describe the pain in their words, not yours.

Mistake: Confusing compliments with demand

“This is cool” is not a buying signal. “Can you send me a contract?” is. Early founders get “happy ears” on calls, hear polite enthusiasm, and conclude they have product-market fit. Then they launch to the sound of… nothing. Silence. The cruelest customer feedback.

Better test: Ask for a commitment that costs something: time (a pilot with weekly check-ins), reputation (an intro to a decision-maker), workflow change (install the tool), or money (even a small paid trial). If they won’t pay anything, change anything, or risk anything, it’s not demandit’s vibes.

Mistake: Not launching (or “polishing” your way into irrelevance)

Many first-time founders delay launch because the product isn’t “ready.” Meanwhile, the calendar is ready. The market is ready. Your competitors are ready. Perfectionism is just fear wearing a nice blazer.

Mistake: Overbuilding the “grand vision” instead of shipping a narrow wedge

A classic failure pattern: “We’re building an all-in-one platform.” Translation: you’re building 12 half-products and none of them solve a sharp pain end-to-end. The better move is a narrow wedge: one use case, one persona, one urgent moment.

Example: Instead of “AI for customer support,” you ship “AI that drafts replies for refund requests for Shopify stores under 10 employees.” That’s a wedge. It gives you clear messaging, clear onboarding, and a clear place to find the first 50 customers.

Mistake: Treating go-to-market like a “later problem”

Founders love product because product feels controllable. Go-to-market feels like juggling while someone throws tomatoes. But in SaaS, distribution isn’t optional. It’s the whole sport.

Mistake: Hiring a senior sales leader too early

A common SaaS trap is believing a VP of Sales will “create revenue.” In reality, senior sales leaders scale what already works. If you don’t have a repeatable motionclear ICP, proven messaging, a pipeline source that isn’t “hope,” and a couple reps who can hit quotathen a VP will mostly scale your burn rate.

Mistake: Trying every channel at once

New founders often run “marketing” like a buffet: a little SEO, a little paid, a little outbound, a podcast, three webinars, a community, and a partridge in a pear tree. The result is shallow learning everywhere and mastery nowhere.

Better approach: Pick one primary channel to learn deeply for 60–90 days, measure it honestly, then add the second channel only after the first is predictable. Early startups don’t need “omnichannel.” They need “one channel that works.”

Mistake: Not knowing where the first users will come from

If you can’t name 100 potential customers and exactly how you’ll reach them, your problem isn’t marketing tactics. Your problem is clarity. Many successful early plays are painfully unglamorous: founder-led outbound, partnerships, communities, niche forums, or direct network activation.

Mistake: Burning cash on status symbols instead of survival

Startups are fragile at the beginning. Cash is oxygen. New founders often spend like they’re already a “real company,” which is adorable right up until payroll day.

Mistake: Buying “startup cosplay”

Fancy office. Fancy swag. Fancy video gear. Fancy tools with annual contracts. None of these are inherently evil. They’re just usually irrelevant before you have traction. Early-stage spending should buy learning or revenuepreferably both.

Mistake: Not tracking the basics

You don’t need a finance team to understand runway, burn, and how many months you have left if nothing improves (because sometimes nothing improves for a while). Founders who don’t measure end up “surprised” by predictable outcomes. The universe is not obligated to be subtle.

Mistake: Hiring too fast (or hiring titles instead of outcomes)

Hiring is a leverage point and a risk point. Early teams can be ruined by one high-ego, low-output hireespecially if they come with a shiny title and a talent for meetings.

Mistake: Handing out big titles to solve uncertainty

“Let’s hire a Head of Growth” can mean “We don’t know how growth works.” That’s not a role. That’s a confession. Early on, you want builders who can execute in ambiguity and do the work, not just manage the work.

Mistake: Underestimating recruiting as founder work

Many founders treat hiring like a side quest. But recruiting is core. The best founders sell candidates on the mission, the problem, and the learning curveand they do it with the same intensity they sell customers.

Example: You hire your first marketer because they have “SaaS experience.” But the real job is: write positioning, craft a landing page that converts, set up lifecycle emails, and run experiments. If they can’t ship, the resume doesn’t matter.

Mistake: Fundraising like it’s a trophy, not a tool

Fundraising is not the goal. It’s a strategy choice. And it comes with obligations: expectations, board dynamics, and a timeline that doesn’t care about your feelings.

Mistake: Raising without a clear plan for what the money unlocks

Founders often raise, then “figure it out.” That’s backwards. Capital should purchase acceleration: faster iteration, faster distribution, faster hiring for proven needs. If money just increases your burn without increasing learning speed, you’ve bought a shorter runway with nicer slides.

Mistake: Pitching the trend, not the traction

It’s tempting to frame everything as the hottest themeespecially in AI cycles. But investors (and customers) eventually ask the boring question: “So what happens if the hype fades?” Your best defense is proof: retention, expansion, pipeline quality, and a crisp explanation of why you win.

Founders love innovation and hate paperwork. Unfortunately, the paperwork can absolutely tackle you from behind.

Mistake: Equity and cap table errors early

Early equity mistakesmissing vesting, unclear option grants, sloppy founder agreementscan create ugly problems later, especially when hiring or raising. The best time to set up clean foundations is before you have momentum, not after lawyers start using phrases like “material risk.”

Mistake: No contracts, no guardrails

“We’ll just start working together” is a charming sentence that occasionally becomes evidence. Even simple agreements (SOWs, DPAs where relevant, basic terms) protect both sides and reduce friction when something goes wrongwhich it will, because startups are basically a controlled experiment in things going wrong.

Mistake: Leading with ego instead of reality

Founder psychology matters more than people admit. Many startups don’t die because the market is impossiblethey die because the founder can’t adapt, can’t decide, or can’t hear the truth.

Mistake: Indecision dressed up as “strategy”

Some founders endlessly debate, research, and “consider options” while competitors ship. Decisiveness doesn’t mean being reckless. It means choosing a direction, measuring the outcome, and adjusting quickly. Speed plus learning beats perfection plus paralysis.

Mistake: Taking feedback as an insult

Customer feedback isn’t a judgment of your worth. It’s free R&D. The founders who win treat feedback like data, not drama. They separate the message (“this onboarding is confusing”) from their identity (“I am confusing as a person,” which is… a separate issue).

What to do instead: A practical anti-mistake checklist

  • Cofounders: Choose for excellence + commitment. Define roles, equity, vesting, and conflict rules early.
  • Customers: Talk to users weekly. Test willingness to change behavior, not just willingness to compliment.
  • Product: Ship a narrow wedge. Build the smallest thing that solves a sharp pain end-to-end.
  • GTM: Founder-led sales/marketing first. Pick one channel, learn it deeply, then expand.
  • Hiring: Hire builders over titles. Don’t outsource fundamentals (sales, support, ICP learning).
  • Cash: Treat runway like oxygen. Spend to learn or sell, not to look legitimate.
  • Fundraising: Raise to accelerate proven motion. Know what milestones capital buys.
  • Ops: Get the basics rightequity, contracts, accounting hygienebefore complexity arrives.

Extra field notes: of lived “founder mistakes” experience (so you don’t have to)

Here are the most realistic “in-the-trenches” experiences that map directly to the Dear SaaStr questionthings founders repeatedly run into, even when they’re smart, hardworking, and genuinely trying. Think of these as scars with bullet points.

1) The “I’ll just hire someone for that” illusion

In the first year, founders often try to outsource uncertainty. Sales feels hard? Hire a salesperson. Marketing feels mysterious? Hire a marketer. Support is annoying? Hire support. The catch: if you don’t understand the motion yourself, you can’t hire for it, manage it, or judge whether it’s working. The result is spending money to avoid learningthe most expensive way to stay confused.

2) The demo that accidentally reveals your positioning problem

A classic moment: you give a demo, and the buyer keeps asking, “So… who is this for?” You answer with features. They ask again. You answer with architecture. They ask again. By minute 12, you realize you built something impressive that nobody can categorize. The fix is not more features. The fix is a crisp statement: “This helps X do Y so they can achieve Z, without A and B.” When that clicks, your close rate changes.

3) The first churn that teaches you humility

Early churn hurts because you remember every customer’s name. Founders often respond by adding more features. But churn usually comes from mismatch, not missing buttons: wrong ICP, wrong expectations, or a weak “first value” moment. The best response is a churn interview plus a ruthless look at onboarding. If customers don’t get value fast, they don’t stick around to appreciate your future roadmap.

4) The “enterprise deal” that hijacks your roadmap

Nothing warps a startup like one big logo dangling a contract. Founders build custom features, custom workflows, custom everythingand end up with a product that only works for one customer (who may still not sign). A safer pattern is: if a request won’t be useful for at least 30% of your target customers, treat it as paid customization with strict limits, or don’t do it.

5) The day you realize culture is happening whether you design it or not

Culture isn’t your values deck. It’s how decisions get made when you’re tired and behind. Early founders sometimes delay culture because it feels corporate. But the first three hires quietly define your company’s normsspeed, ownership, honesty, and how conflict works. If you don’t set expectations, the loudest personality will.

The throughline of all these experiences is simple: early-stage success is less about “genius strategy” and more about disciplined learning. Talk to users. Ship small. Measure honestly. Stay close to revenue. Choose great people. Repeat until it looks like magic.

Conclusion

The top mistakes new founders make aren’t mysterious. They’re human: choosing convenience over excellence (especially with cofounders), building before validating, hiding from go-to-market, hiring titles too early, spending to feel legitimate, and fundraising as a scoreboard instead of a tool. The antidote is equally human: clarity, discipline, honest measurement, and the humility to change your mind quickly.

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