How can you love the problem if you have never found real love? What is love?
Jokes aside, if you've never found a problem worth solving, you might not know how it feels.
Customer problems come in different levels of urgency. Some you should ignore, others are your best friend.
I identify 6 levels, here’s how you can recognise them.
Breakdown of 6 levels
Can’t experience: Ignore these people and don’t take their feedback on your product too seriously.
Never experienced: You can learn what a non-problem experience is like. Don’t take product feedback seriously.
Latent experience: You can test if your pitch, brochure or prototype works for people to recognise your product as a fix for their problem.
Experienced, not looking: People gave up, you can learn why people gave up looking. There is a high likelihood of sales here if your solution is great.
Experienced, active looking: Highest sales potential, yet they are hard to find. The high purchase intent window is often short.
Experienced, recently solved: Don’t bother to make the sale, but learn about their solution.
How to use this?
You find only levels 1 and 2: you need to adjust your target segment and often also the channel.
You find only level 3: Try to reflect on your segment and adjust, but sometimes this fixes by itself over time.
You find only levels 4 and 5: Lucky you. You probably have nailed your targeting and marketing. Now, go do sales!
You find only level 6: The window to sell is earlier in their journey. Try to inject yourself earlier in their journey. This might require you to switch channels.
Must read next:
How to use this model to identify launching customers for your beachhead.
A case study using this framework on an actual startup
Having a problem isn't enough. Are they willing to pay for it? I've run into issues where possible leads would churn at the paywall, indicating that they don't really prioritize solving the problem for themselves
Solving problems? Step one: find people with actual problems. 😊