{"id":273,"date":"2025-06-23T11:00:00","date_gmt":"2025-06-23T11:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/buywyo.com\/?p=273"},"modified":"2025-06-23T11:23:51","modified_gmt":"2025-06-23T11:23:51","slug":"in-a-feature-parity-world-its-all-about-your-brand-heres-how-your-startup-can-nail-it-in-the-first-100-days","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/buywyo.com\/index.php\/2025\/06\/23\/in-a-feature-parity-world-its-all-about-your-brand-heres-how-your-startup-can-nail-it-in-the-first-100-days\/","title":{"rendered":"In a feature-parity world, it\u2019s all about your brand \u2014 here\u2019s how your startup can nail it in the first 100 days"},"content":{"rendered":"
Let\u2019s say you\u2018re the CMO of a scrappy startup, and you\u2019ve got limited (or no) budget. You\u2019ve got no name recognition, and no time to waste. So, where do you start to make the biggest impact?<\/p>\n
Brand.<\/p>\n
I\u2019ve seen this firsthand. I helped build Drift into a category-defining brand and turned my company, Exit Five, into a seven-figure media business.<\/p>\n If I were starting from zero today, I wouldn\u2019t wait. I\u2019d go all-in on brand from day one. Here\u2019s my approach to building a brand in your first 100 days, before you have money or traction. Let\u2019s dive in.<\/p>\n Today\u2019s AI-driven market is full of copycat software tools. So, your brand needs a differentiating factor. For an established company, that\u2019s brand proof. The CRM with 20 years of experience has more proof of its brand value. Early-stage startups can\u2019t point to that type of history.<\/p>\n So, if you\u2019re a scrappy startup, you\u2019ll need to try harder to stand out. That requires really knowing your story. What\u2019s your message, and what makes your journey so compelling that people remember? Then, can you reinforce that message with brand elements \u2014 a unique motif, a recognizable logo, or a color scheme that screams you?<\/em><\/p>\n Take a look at this company called Blaze AI, a marketing tool built to drive automation. The branding is so eye-catching that it stands out. The superhero theme is memorable. I\u2019m reminded of my favorite comic books where remarkable characters save the day. Perhaps their offering can do just that for my business.<\/p>\n Source<\/em><\/a><\/p>\n Source<\/em><\/a><\/p>\n As a startup, you should already have competitive features. Your offering needs to be just as good or better than what\u2019s already in the market. And, when the product holds its own, your vibe, story, and the platforms you use set you apart. You\u2019ll resonate with customers who are authentically on the same wavelength. That\u2019s essential for growing your business.<\/p>\n So, how do you build a brand from scratch? Let me break down what I think you should prioritize.<\/p>\n Number one: Build a strategic narrative.<\/p>\n That means having a strong point of view about why your company exists and the problem that you help people solve.<\/p>\n In my experience, when we talk about brand, we get too obsessed with colors, fonts, and websites. It’s ultimately the story that matters. That\u2019s the reason you exist.<\/p>\n When I was a young marketer coming up in my career, Hubspot was a brand that I religiously followed, because they came out with this thing called inbound marketing. In the 2010s, the brand focused on marketers who made content to attract people to their company.<\/p>\n The tactic resonated because my background was not in paid. I realized, \u201cOh, that’s me! That’s what I do. I write. I make social media content. I have a newsletter.\u201d Sure, I like orange, and the events look fun, but the inbound marketing narrative pulled me in.<\/p>\n The lesson here? As a new startup, you may not have market share. But, you do <\/em>have a unique angle \u2014 the problem that you solve or the story that makes you unique. You also have a founder to evangelize that strong point of view. These are assets, and you need to make the most of them.<\/p>\n So, you have a narrative. Now, you get to have fun with the design, the tactics, and the execution. I recommend jumping right in. You can test different brand elements and iterate.<\/p>\n If I were a founder, I would want to be on social media right now. Even if I only have seven followers, I could test my messaging to see what works. I’m also sending 10 DMs or cold outbound emails to my ideal customer, hoping to book sales meetings.<\/p>\n But, if none of those messages land, that’s amazing feedback and data. I know that this message clearly doesn\u2019t resonate with people.<\/p>\n When I was at Drift, our product was a chatbot. I interviewed our CEO, who ranted about why lead gen was broken. With a chatbot, forms would be obsolete, and Drift was going to lead the new way.<\/p>\n That message was clear. So, we took a bet.<\/p>\n We turned the interview into an article for our blog. We posted it on social media. We sent it out to our email list. We DM’d it to people. And within days, the idea took off. It was getting more comments than anything we had written before, getting more shares, getting more inbound.<\/p>\n That’s the signal we needed. Now, we could double down. We came up with #NoForms. We made stickers, and it was a whole content campaign.<\/p>\n The enemy here is waiting for that perfect message. Riffing and experimenting help you move faster.<\/p>\n You need to truly understand where your customers hang out online, who influences those people, and what podcasts they listen to. This is just marketing 101, but happening digitally.<\/p>\n In the past, trade groups, analyst firms, and conferences had the power. Now, that’s all happening on X, LinkedIn, Instagram, TikTok, and Reddit. My focus groups every day are comments in our community. I\u2019m analyzing the responses to our newsletter and the audience sentiment of my LinkedIn comments.<\/p>\n If you have no audience in those existing channels, you\u2019ll need to get creative. Let’s say I want to start a new juice box brand for kids. I would be going to subreddits and Instagram pages for parents. I\u2019d meet up with other parent friends, gut-checking my message in smaller ways before I expand.<\/p>\n When you\u2018re doing this kind of testing, you don\u2019t need a massive research budget. You don’t need a fancy agency. You just need to get in front of the people who might buy your product. You can then see what resonates.<\/p>\n The biggest mistake I see? Expecting your brand to deliver overnight results.<\/p>\n Founders will say, \u201cWe launched a podcast and posted on social, but we didn\u2019t get any new leads after a month.\u201d That\u2019s not how this works.<\/p>\n What if you kept at it?<\/p>\n With Exit Five, I\u2019ve published a podcast episode every week for three years. And guess what? Of our members, 75-80% say they found us through the podcast. If I\u2019d quit after 90 days, we\u2019d have missed all of that.<\/p>\n<\/a><\/strong><\/p>\n
Why Brand Matters More Than Ever for Early <\/strong>Startups<\/strong><\/h2>\n
<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
How to Build a Brand as a Startup Founder or CMO<\/h2>\n
Build your strategic narrative first, no exceptions.<\/h3>\n
Test your message on social media immediately.<\/h3>\n
Find where your audience already hangs out.<\/h3>\n
Brand Building Is a Long Game \u2014 Play Accordingly<\/h2>\n
<\/p>\n