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Idea to Startup

Author: Brian Scordato | Tacklebox

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A podcast for people working on startup ideas. We have 15-minute tactical episodes and occasional interviews with people who did the early things exceptionally well. We've helped launch hundreds of startups worth hundreds of millions of dollars, and these are the building blocks.

"This is, without a doubt, the best podcast for people trying to build startups out there."

"If you aren't listening to this podcast and you're considering building a business (or you're already building one), what are you doing?"

"Must listen for first-time entrepreneurs - excellent storyteller."
256 Episodes
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Today, we'll talk about why so many entrepreneurs can't effectively explain what they're doing to their customers. The short answer is they speak the wrong language. Customers speak Problem, entrepreneurs speak Solution. It's like two people trying to have a conversation when one only speaks Latin and the other only speaks Dutch.We go through how to start speaking Problem, and show the power of Problem Language through a live idea test - two landing pages for an AI bot to help people get out of debt: one with Solution Language, one with Problem Language.  TackleboxThe Brain Audit00:00 Tacklebox00:37 How to Speak Problem01:21 The Brain Audit01:55 Farm Stand Problem Language06:03 The Idea: AI to Get Out of Debt07:38 Smooth Jazz08:07 Why You Won’t Use Problem Language10:31 Signs in NYC15:00 AI for Debt17:41 Landing Page Test19:18 The End: This Is Everywhere - Cold Email Examples
Today’s episode is for everyone who struggles to summarize their startup in a sentence. We lay out a framework to do this well with help from a sticker on the street, a hedge fund, and a Vietnamese coffee shop.TackleboxIdea to Startup Newsletter00:33 One Sentence Marketing01:10 Train to NYC03:04 The best marketing Brian’s seen in a while06:42 Smooth Jazz07:28 Choosing a Customer and the Knowledge Spectrum08:54 Air Quality Idea13:07 Inflection Points + The Conference Exercise14:09 The End - Vietnamese Coffee
Today, we'll teach you how to name your startup. This is from No Whisper Ideas, a post sent every Sunday by Brian. Customer Interviews Workshop (Starts Sep 15)No Whisper Ideas Weekly Post 
Today, we build a machine to help you actually run customer interviews.We’ll use AI to tackle the big blockers—accountability, CRM setup, outreach, transcription, and even how to pick your first customer. You’ll hear the idea Brian is testing with the interview machine, and we’ll walk through exactly how AI can make the process faster, more uncomfortable (in the right way), and a lot more effective. Plus, a bit on creativity and being human.Tacklebox Customer Interview Workshop (starts 9/15)ClaudeCalendlyGranola00:00 Intro00:30 Avoiding Criticism04:08 The Job of Customer Interviews09:12 Smooth Jazz09:30 Whisper Ideas11:35 The Idea:15:35 The AI Interview Machine17:34 Accountability19:13 Top of Funnel Outreach21:18 Interview Execution22:39 Synthesis23:43 The End
Today, we talk through a 4-part system to generate ideas - one that'll tap into your brain's natural ability to develop novel solutions rather than just waiting (hoping) inspiration will strike. We'll do it with a little help from a baseball training facility, a corked wine bottle, and an MRI startup. The Tacklebox Customer Interviews Workshop - Sept. Session is OPENIdea to Startup NewsletterFermenting IdeasPod: Customers speak ProblemPod: How to Create a Strategy for your StartupReadwiseIdea to Startup Bot00:26 Idea People02:47 A Baseball Training Facility04:45 Inversion07:46 Smooth Jazz9:24 Part 1: Identifying the Problem12:34 Part 2: Collecting17:22 Part 3: Chewing20:14 Part 4: Testing21:37 The End + How to Start
Today, we'll help you tackle the big question for entrepreneurs with startup ideas and jobs - when's it time to quit the job and focus on the startup full-time? You should think about this question the second you start working on an idea, and you should use the Skeptical Startup framework - a goal of $8k per month in 10 hours per week - as a guide. The Skeptical Startup framework is magical, and Brian will show how it'll help you focus with an example startup.  TackleboxIdea to Startup NewsletterIdea to Startup BotFarnam Street - Surface AreaThe AlchemistNatalie Imbruglia - Torn00:30 When to Quit Your Job03:25 Life Expenses Excel Sheet04:05 The Skeptical Startup Framework06:25 The Idea: Home AV Improvements07:44 Smooth Jazz08:22 The Logistics of $8k11:26 An AV Marketplace12:46 Reduce the Surface Area15:27 The Search16:30 A Lead for the AV Startup19:16 The End - Your Goals19:26 A Goal Framework
Today, we talk about the difference between Entrepreneur Brain and Normal Brain. Normal Brain is out to sabotage your startup. We teach you Entrepreneur Brain to make sure that doesn't happen. Tacklebox 10-Day Customer Interview WorkshopAli Abdaal - The Good Student vs. The Good Entrepreneur Mindset (text, Ali's email signup)Graham Weaver - How to Design a Winnable GameDaina Trout EpisodeTimestamps:00:30 Entrepreneur Brain vs. Normal Brain01:50 The $2 Million Dollar House05:30 Customer Interviews Workshop6:06 Situation #1: The Overwhelming To Do LIst10:57 Situation #2: When Things Don’t Work13:09 Situation #3: When You Feel Unprepared15:48 Situation #4: When You Are Low On Resources18:17 The End: Lotto Tickets
Today, we'll help you get two months of work done in a weekend. We break down a four-part sprint framework that is actually realistic and manageable for founders with full-time jobs and families or dogs or other responsibilities / dense, unpredictable lives. We also show how a sprint helped launch Habit Kangaroo, one of Brian's side projects, a few years back. The framework covers goal-setting, preparation, creating urgency through "hooks," and how to rely on people to stay happy. Share it with a potential cofounder and get to work. Tacklebox Customer Interview Sprint WorkshopGraham Weaver00:26 - Three Things: Thing One: A Weekend Sprint01:30 - Habit Kangaroo04:37 - Feedback Loops09:45 Smooth Jazz10:10 - Sprint Structure: Goal, Prep, Hook, Reliance10:15 - Goal12:36 - Prep14:56 - Hook16:53 - Reliance19:38 - The End - Happiness
Today, we'll help all the non-storytellers tell a compelling story about their business. We've got a framework that'll walk you through the ingredients of a compelling story, and a mise en place-inspired approach that'll help you get to story market fit. We've got some rules, some variables, some accelerants, and an example about a service that helps Airbnb hosts launch their own interior design businesses.  TackleboxIdea to Startup NewsletterBuilding a Story BrandYour New Life Will Cost You Your Old OneWork Clean - The Life-Changing Power of Mise en PlaceHow to Write Essays that Spread00:30 Storytelling for your startup03:24 The Two Reasons for the Barefoot Son Story07:09 Smooth Jazz07:37 The Three Ruls of Good Storytelling for Entrepreneurs08:45 Rule 1: Good Stories Are About Speed10:44 Rule 2: You Don’t Matter11:39 Rule 3: A Good Story is Earned12:22 Mise En Place14:10 The Ingredients of Your Story17:09 The Accelerants19:24 Airbnb Interior Design23:23 The End: Montaigne
Most startup advice says you need to be "maniacally focused" on one thing. I disagree. You need to balance your focus with some good old fashioned floundering. This episode is about the balance - when to focus and when to flounder - and how to build each skill. We even built a framework to help you out - The Four Rules of Floundering. The Let's Actually Run Customer Interviews Workshop - a 10-day program that'll help you actually, finally, run proper customer interviews. This will kickstart your business. $150 through July 31 with code "EARLY"Flounder Mode 0:00 Let’s Run Customer Interviews Workshop01:12 Mailbag02:44 How to Flounder03:56 The Idea: Community Investment Circles07:11 When is it time to become “maniacally focused”?10:35 The Four Rules of Floundering15:26 Floundering’s real value: longevity
One of the most-listened and shared episodes of 2024 - an episode that multiple people reached out months later to say "this single episode helped me launch my business." So, that's cool. It's on standing out in a crowded market, and it's on mice. Specifically, the guy who got rid of ours. There are four lessons, a framework, Customer Journey Mapping and the Feature Fold. TackleboxIdea to Startup NewsletterIdea to Startup BotSugar (but it stinks)00:30 Intro02:00 We’ve Got Mice05:15 The Mouse Man’s Funnel07:50 Smooth Jazz08:21 One - Build Your Funnel to Match Customer Emotion11:45 Good Questions For Your Funnel12:30 Two - Contrast from the Feature Fold14:30 Saving your Customers a Decision15:53 Three - Take Yourself Seriously19:14 Four - The Things Other People Stink At22:14 The End22:50 Recap of the Four Lessons
Today, we'll help you stop beating yourself up so that you have the space to take the creative, strategic risks your startup needs to be successful. We'll go through the Eight Eccentricities of Startups - stuff you beat yourself up over but shouldn't - and three practices to help you navigate them. We also talk about baseball, goldfish, and Guy Raz. TackleboxStop Beating Yourself Up Post00:30 Stop Beating Yourself Up02:53 The Beating Yourself Up Equation06:49 Smooth Jazz07:04 The Reality of Baseball09:18 The Eight Eccentricities of Startup Progress17:16 Three Practices to Break the Beat Yourself Up Cycle
Today, we've got a classic, much-listened to episode on getting your first 1,000 customers. We contrast the approaches of two pizza companies - Push for Pizza and Slice - and see how each company's early growth approach led to their bigger strategy. You also get a much less polished Brian on the mic. My grunge era. Enjoy! TackleboxSliceFirst 1000 SubstackTacklebox + Self-Serve Product 
Most founders don't know what their differentiator is. That's a problem. Today, we walk through two paths to help you find a differentiator strong enough to anchor a business. We also help you root out bad differentiators - the ones that'll just waste your time. There's also a story about a Rabbi's wisdom, a founder making decaf coffee, and a poison ivy company I'm obsessed with. Tacklebox - start your company before you quit your jobHow to Find Your WedgeHow to Use Landing Page Tests 00:30 Differentiator Intro01:45 Rabbi Joke05:15 Smooth Jazz05:45 How to Find Your Differentiator06:46 Path 1: Letting a Customer Tell You11:41 Path 2: Four Questions to Pick Your Differentiator19:32 How to Test Differentiators21:00 The Reality of Differentiators (Downer)22:16 The End - Taking Yourself Seriously
Vacuums are uncomfortable, but they're actually far less risky than the alternative. A No Whisper Ideas post on how to think about, approach, and create vacuums.Brought to you by Tacklebox.  
Today, we're digging into the mailbag to answer some common questions. We hit on how to actually commit to a startup idea when you aren't confident it'll work (featuring the Discipline + Strategy Levers), the most frequent advice I give (feat. Monkeys and Pedestals and Sell the Position), and a question on the startup decision - should you do a thing that'll take 10 years? TackleboxGood Strategy Bad Strategy 00:30 Mailbag01:53 Question One: How to Commit to an Idea03:57 Discipline - Levers and Hooks05:42 Marathon Programs11:30 Strategy - Where to Run19:00 Smooth Jazz19:21 Question Two: The Key Stories20:22 Monkeys and Pedestals23:00 Sell the Position25:07 The $10K Prompt25:53 Question Three: How Old Will You Be?
Today is Part 2 of the series introducing the ERP (Early Rep Potential) Rubric. The idea behind ERP is that the best idea for you is the one you can do "full rep" tests on the fastest. We help Erica evaluate the potential of her FODMAP idea, where she's looking to help people identify specific food sensitivities. We score the idea and get clarity on its potential. We also talk a little Jon Hamm.  Tacklebox (test your startup idea)No Whisper Ideas (weekly newsletter, sign up to get a Notion copy of the ERP Rubric)How to Pick Which (of your many) Ideas to Pursue (ERP Rubric Part 1)Jon Hamm Show 00:30 ERP Rubric Part Two03:52 The Ideas - Mold and FODMAPs06:27 ERP Intro: Choose a Specific Customer09:12 Part 1: Can You Find Your Customer?12:59 Part 2: Can You Convert Customers?17:01 Part 3: Can You Build a Solution?21:12 Part 4: Collecting Feedback23:19 Part 5: Organic Growth Potential25:23 The Final Two Questions28:00 The End
Today, we're trying something new. We send out the No Whisper Ideas newsletter every Sunday, and today, we posted it here. Maybe you'll like it. It's on Startup Misogis, a way to make a visible, memorable dent in your year. TackleboxNo Whisper IdeasThe North Fork CenturyThe RideMisogiJesse ItzlerProof That You Can Do Hard Things00:00 Intro - What This Is01: 34 A 100 Mile Bike RIde02:22 A Misogi Challenge04:16 Startup Misogis
Got a notebook full of startup ideas but no clue which one to build first? In this week’s pen-and-paper episode, we walk through the ERP—Early Rep Potential—Rubric, our simple scoring system that shows you which idea you can run the fastest customer “reps” on. We’ll put Erica (a Tacklebox member juggling “easily twenty ideas”) to the test, scoring her two biggest concepts live. Want to follow along? Grab an editable copy of the ERP template at gettacklebox.com when you sign up for our No Whisper Ideas weekly article here.TackleboxNo Whisper Ideas00:30 When You’ve Got Lots of Startup Ideas (Meet Erica)02:32 The Two Types of Entrepreneurs07:13 Erica’s Ideas12:40 Smooth Jazz13:05 Reps16:20 The ERP Rubric22:51 The ERP in Action
Today, we’re talking about startup identity—why you need one, and how it makes every decision you face way easier. We’ll talk swimming and nervous systems, walk through the Decision Equation, and help our good friend Carl figure out which customer to start with for his AI tool that helps adults learn Spanish. Then we’ll wrap with a simple framework to help you clearly define your startup’s identity. It’s practical, a little weird, and really important. On to it.TackleboxHeroTimestamps00:30 Your Startup Identity01:30 How to Swim04:17 How to Learn Something New06:34 Re-learning How to Make Decisions08:45 Tacklebox - two week free trial09:15 Carl’s Idea - AI for Learning Spanish13:13 The Decision Equation14:15 Picking a Customer19:30 Identity: Your Decision Filter21:30 Four Identity Exercises24:13 The End: What Do You Want?
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Comments (3)

Habia Khet

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Feb 5th
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Carlos Barron

I thoroughly enjoyed listening to the "Idea to Startup" podcast. The insights provided by the host and the featured guests, who are experienced entrepreneurs, were invaluable. The discussions on ideation, validation, and the various stages of turning an idea into a successful startup were not only informative but also inspiring. https://www.whodoyou.com/biz/2206480/deli-paper-pros-ny-us The real-life examples and case studies shared during the podcast provided a practical perspective that is often missing in other resources. One key takeaway for me was the emphasis on market research and understanding the target audience, which is crucial for the success of any startup. Overall, this podcast is a must-listen for anyone aspiring to venture into the entrepreneurial world. http://www.greenvillecityguide.com/queens/local-services/deli-paper-pros

Nov 16th
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Kishan Nahsik

great podcast 👍

Jun 17th
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