People Ask: How to Market Without a Product?

TL;DR · AI Summary
Marketing before building is a proven risk-reduction tactic, as seen in Kickstarter, car pre-orders and game pre-sales; distinguish “Fake it till you make itit}” from fraud.
Key Takeaways
- Kickstarter pre-sales show marketing can precede physical goods
- Developing before validating CMF yields high failure rates
- Fake it till you make it is risk hedging, not deception
Outline
Jump quickly between sections.
Commenters’ confusion stems from not being followers.
Kickstarter, car pre-orders, waitlists and game pre-sales all market first.
Building before CMF validation is riskier than marketing to test demand.
Fake it till you make it reduces market risk, unlike outright fraud.
Mindmap
See how the topics connect at a glance.
查看大纲文本(无障碍 / 无 JS 友好)
- 先营销后产品
- 案例
- Kickstarter
- 汽车预售
- 游戏跳票
- 风险逻辑
- CMF 验证
- 需求前置
- 概念区分
- Fake it till you make it
- ≠ 欺诈
Highlights
Key sentences worth saving and sharing.
We always see ‘product ready, seeking marketing co-founder’ but never ‘marketing ready, seeking tech/product co-founder’
If CMF is unproven, blind R&D carries high risk
Fake it till you make it teaches risk reduction, not scamming
Yangyi on X: "Lots of people in the comments are saying, 'How can you market without a product?' I was puzzled—I've posted about this so many times on this account. Is it really that hard to grasp? Then I checked and, well, none of them are my followers, so I feel better now. Let me ask a few questions: Aren’t Kickstarter campaigns and car pre-sales marketing first? Aren’t waitlists and fake videos also marketing first? What about those games that took money early and then got delayed, or those deceptive game ads that turn out to be something else once you download them—aren't all of those marketing first? If you haven't validated CMF, blindly building the product is high-risk. That’s exactly why we built a product we couldn’t promote. 'Fake it till you make it' isn’t telling people to lie; it’s about learning how to reduce risk."
Quote

Yangyi
@yangyi
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May 21
It’s always “We’ve nailed the tech/product, looking for an ops/marketing partner,” but you never see anyone shouting, “We’ve nailed the marketing, looking for a tech/product partner.”
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