LaunchPad: Ignite Your Startup’s First 90 Days
Starting a company is a sprint disguised as a marathon. The first 90 days set the trajectory: validate the idea, build a tightly focused product, land initial customers, and create repeatable operations. This plan gives a day-by-day, prioritized playbook to move from concept to traction quickly while minimizing wasted effort.
Week 0 — Before Day 1: Set the foundation
- Goal: Clarify the problem, assemble a tiny core team, and commit to a measurable 90-day objective (the North Star).
- Deliverables: One-line value proposition, single measurable North Star (e.g., 100 paying users), roles for a 2–4 person core team, and a simple workboard (Trello/Notion).
Days 1–14 — Validate fast
- Goal: Prove there’s real demand for the problem you plan to solve.
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Steps:
- Customer interviews (days 1–5): Run 20 targeted conversations with prospects. Use a problem-focused script; avoid pitching. Log pain, frequency, current solutions, and willingness to pay.
- Competition and positioning (days 3–7): Map direct and indirect alternatives; identify a defensible angle (speed, price, niche).
- Value hypothesis & pricing (days 6–10): Draft a simple hypothesis: “We will convert X% of Y users at $Z/month.” Pick a test price.
- Landing page test (days 8–14): Build a single-page pitch with an email/paid sign-up CTA and run small ads or outreach to measure conversion. Target cost-per-lead and click-through benchmarks relevant to your niche.
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Deliverables by day 14: Interview notes, positioning statement, landing page with conversion data, and a go/no-go decision.
Days 15–45 — Build the smallest thing that can deliver value
- Goal: Ship an MVP that solves the core problem for early adopters.
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Steps:
- Define the MVP (days 15–18): Use interview data to choose the 1–2 features that deliver the critical outcome.
- Sprint development (days 19–35): Two-week development sprints with daily standups, weekly demos, and continuous user feedback. Prioritize orbiting features only.
- Early adopter recruitment (days 25–45): Convert landing page signups, personal networks, and interviewees into test users. Offer incentives (discounts, founder pricing, dedicated support).
- Customer success loop (days 30–45): Implement onboarding checklists, 1:1 sessions, and quick surveys to capture usage, blockers, and feature requests.
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Deliverables by day 45: Working MVP with 5–20 active early users, onboarding materials, and quantified user feedback.
Days 46–75 — Improve, measure, and grow
- Goal: Increase retention and start predictable acquisition.
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Steps:
- Metric focus (days 46–50): Choose 3 KPIs: activation rate, 7-day retention, and CAC (cost to acquire a customer).
- Optimize onboarding (days 51–60): Simplify first-run experience to achieve a clear activation event. A/B test flows and messaging.
- Marketing experiments (days 55–70): Run 3-5 low-cost channels in parallel — content SEO, niche community outreach, cold outreach, and partnerships. Measure channel CAC and conversion.
- Pricing & packaging (days 65–75): Test price sensitivity, upgrade paths, and simple annual discounts.
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Deliverables by day 75: Improved retention, one repeatable acquisition channel with acceptable CAC, and revenue or clear path to revenue.
Days 76–90 — Systematize and plan the next 90 days
- Goal: Turn ad-hoc success into repeatable processes and a clear roadmap.
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Steps:
- Operationalize: Document playbooks for onboarding, sales outreach, support, and product experiments.
- Team & hiring plan: Identify first hires (e.g., growth lead, engineer) and create job specs tied to KPIs.
- Fundraising readiness (if applicable): Prepare a concise pitch deck showing traction, unit economics, and a 12-month plan.
- Roadmap (days 80–90): Prioritize the next quarter’s objectives using the traction data: focus on retention, scaling the top acquisition channel, and building defensibility.
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Deliverables by day 90: Playbooks, a 90-day roadmap, hiring plan, and investor-ready topline metrics.
Rapid tactics that win the first 90 days
- Do fewer things: Constrain scope to one core customer type and one core use case.
- Talk to users daily: Embed customer feedback into every decision.
- Ship weekly: Small, visible improvements keep momentum and sharpen priorities.
- Measure north-star alignment: If a feature doesn’t move your North Star, deprioritize it.
- Use founder-led sales: Founders should lead early outreach and demos to learn and close faster.
Common traps and how to avoid them
- Feature bloat: Avoid building features based on assumptions—validate first.
- Chasing vanity metrics: Focus on retention and revenue signals, not raw signups.
- Hiring too early: Hire only when a role clearly accelerates KPIs.
90-day checklist
- One-line value proposition — done
- North Star metric — set
- 20 customer interviews — complete
- Landing page with conversion data — live
- MVP with 5–20 active users — launched
- One repeatable acquisition channel — identified
- Onboarding and support playbook — documented
- Hiring and fundraising
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