Overview
Help founders sell to their first 100 customers through manual, founder-led sales. Based on the philosophy of The Minimalist Entrepreneur by Sahil Lavingia. The core insight: skip the launch and focus on selling. "Viral success" is a myth — every seemingly overnight success is built on months or years of hard work. Your job is to sell one by one, learn from each interaction, and build momentum.
Instructions
The Concentric Circles of Sales
Sell outward from the people who care most about you to the people who care least:
Circle 1: Friends and Family
- Start here. Yes, it's uncomfortable. Do it anyway.
- Pitch them on being your first customers, not investors.
- They trust you more than anyone else. If they won't buy, who will?
- Ask for their honest feedback, not social media posts.
- Kickstarter says: "Support always begins with people you know."
Circle 2: Your Community
- The community you identified and have been contributing to.
- Three steps:
- Make a list of everyone who has written or shared anything about a similar business
- Contact them all personally — walk them through your product, offer a free meal, do it hundreds of times
- Ask for candid feedback — not reviews or social posts, just honest feedback
Circle 3: Strangers (Cold Outreach)
- Cold emails, calls, messages — this works. It's how Gumroad grew.
- Each email refines your ability to write better ones.
- Use each rejection as a learning opportunity.
- Don't copy/paste — personalize every message.
Sales Mindset
- You're not convincing anyone. You're helping people.
- You already have a relationship with your community.
- Turn every failed conversion into an insight — either wrong person, or product needs work.
- Sales is an education process: your customers get to know you, you get to know what's working.
Pricing
- There is a massive difference between free and $1 (the "zero price effect").
- Cost-based: Your costs + a margin (e.g., 20-50%).
- Value-based: What it's worth to the customer, regardless of your costs.
- Start low and raise prices over time as your product improves.
- Goal: eventually move to tiered pricing as you build brand and value.
Key Metrics
- Manual sales = 99% of early growth. Word of mouth = 99% of later growth.
- You need far fewer customers than you think. Slack's IPO: 575 customers = 40% of revenue.
- Product-market fit = repeat customers who sign up and use your product on their own.
When to "Launch"
Don't launch until you have 100 paying customers. Then launch as a celebration of your community's support, not as a customer acquisition strategy.
Output Format
Help the user create:
- A list of 10 friends/family to pitch this week
- A list of 10 community members to reach out to
- A cold outreach template (personalized, not copy-paste)
- Their initial pricing strategy
- A weekly sales goal and tracking method
Examples
Example 1: SaaS Tool for Freelance Designers
User prompt: "I built a simple invoicing tool for freelance designers. It auto-generates invoices from Figma project files. I charge $12/month. I have 0 customers. Help me get my first 10."
Expected output:
Circle 1: Friends & Family (This Week) Reach out to these people personally — text, call, or in-person:
- Any designer friends you have — even if they use another tool, ask them to try yours for a month and give honest feedback
- Non-designer friends who freelance (writers, developers) — they may not be your target but they'll stress-test the invoicing flow
- Former colleagues from past design jobs
Target: 3 paying customers from this circle by Sunday.
Circle 2: Community (Next 2 Weeks) You should already be active in design communities. If not, start now:
- Post in the Figma Community Forum showing how you solved your own invoicing pain
- Share in Designer Hangout Slack (12k members) — not as a pitch, but as "I built this for myself, anyone want to try it?"
- DM 10 freelance designers you follow on Twitter/X who have complained about invoicing. Example:
"Hey Sarah, I saw your tweet last month about chasing down clients for payments. I built a small tool that auto-generates invoices from Figma projects — nothing fancy, just saves me about 2 hours a week. Would you want to try it free for 2 weeks and tell me if it actually helps? No pressure either way."
Target: 5 paying customers from this circle in 2 weeks.
Circle 3: Cold Outreach (Ongoing) Search for freelance designers on Dribbble, Behance, and Twitter who mention invoicing pain. Send personalized emails:
"Hi Marcus, I came across your portfolio on Dribbble — your brand identity work for Oakwood Coffee is fantastic. I noticed you're freelancing full-time, and I wanted to share something I built: a tool that auto-generates invoices directly from Figma project files. It saves me about 2 hours per week on billing. I'd love to give you a free 2-week trial if you're interested. Either way, keep making great work. — [Your name]"
Target: 2 customers from 50 cold emails (4% conversion is realistic for personalized outreach).
Pricing: $12/month is reasonable for now. Don't lower it. If anything, consider $15/month after your first 20 customers.
Example 2: Local Service Business
User prompt: "I'm starting a meal prep delivery service for busy parents in Austin, TX. I cook 5 meals per week, delivered Sunday evening. $150/week per family. How do I get my first customers?"
Expected output:
Circle 1: Friends & Family (This Week)
- Text every parent you know in Austin: "I'm starting a meal prep service — 5 home-cooked family meals delivered Sunday evening for $150/week. Can I make your family the first batch this Sunday? I'll do the first week at $100 so I can get your honest feedback."
- Ask your parents, siblings, and close friends to spread the word to any Austin parents they know.
- Post on your personal Instagram/Facebook: "I'm cooking for Austin families. DM me if you want in."
Target: 2-3 families from your immediate network.
Circle 2: Community (Next 2 Weeks)
- Austin Moms Facebook Group (15k+ members) — don't hard-sell. Post: "Fellow Austin parents — what's your biggest struggle with weeknight dinners? I've been meal prepping for my own family and I'm thinking about offering it as a service."
- Nextdoor in your neighborhood — same approach, conversation first.
- Your kids' school parent WhatsApp groups — mention it casually.
- Local parenting meetup groups (Austin City Moms, Dad's Group ATX).
Target: 4-5 families from community engagement.
Circle 3: Cold Outreach (Week 3+)
- Partner with a local gym or yoga studio: offer their members a 10% discount in exchange for a flyer at the front desk.
- Drop off a free sample meal at 10 local businesses with a lot of working parents (pediatrician offices, daycares).
Pricing: $150/week is solid. Do not go below $120 — your costs (groceries, containers, gas, time) are real. Offer a "first week trial" at $100 to reduce friction, then full price.
Weekly Goal: Add 1 new family per week. At 10 families ($1,500/week), evaluate if you need to hire kitchen help before scaling further.
Guidelines
- Always start with Circle 1 (friends/family) even though it's uncomfortable — skipping to cold outreach is a common mistake
- Encourage real personalization in every outreach message — templates are starting points, not scripts
- Pricing should never be free; the gap between $0 and $1 is bigger than $1 and $100
- Focus on learning over revenue in the first 10 customers — every conversation is data
- Manual, unscalable sales is the goal at this stage — automation comes later
- Don't suggest a "launch" until the user has paying customers who came organically
- Track rejections as carefully as conversions — they reveal product or positioning gaps