Arnt Eriksen

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Why Your 'Target Audience' Is Probably a Myth

(And How to Win the Startup Game)

Hey, anxious founder. Yes, you.

The one who's up at 3 AM, wondering if your brilliant idea will ever see the light of day. The one who's juggling a million roles, from CEO to coffee runner. The one who's desperately trying to stand out in a sea of startups.

I see you. And I've got news for you: Your target audience? It's probably a myth.

Not because it doesn't exist. But because you're thinking about it all wrong.

You see, in your pitch deck, you've got this neat little slide about your target market. It's full of demographic data, market size projections, and maybe even some cute icons representing your ideal customer.

It's impressive. It's comprehensive. And it's about as useful as a chocolate teapot.

Because here's the cold, hard truth: Understanding your audience isn't about data. It's about empathy.

Let's break it down:

  1. Your Audience Isn't a Statistic, It's a Person Forget the "25-35 year old urban professionals" nonsense. Your real audience? It's Sarah, the 29-year-old product manager who's sick of using clunky software at work. It's Tom, the 41-year-old e-commerce CEO who's struggling to keep his brand authentic as he scales. They're not numbers. They're people with fears, dreams, and 3 AM panic attacks (just like you).

  2. Pain Points Are Your North Star What keeps your audience up at night? What makes them want to pull their hair out? What problem would they pay almost anything to solve? For Sarah, it might be the fear of her innovative product getting lost in the noise. For Tom, it's the terror of losing his brand's soul as he scales. Find that pain. Solve that pain. That's your golden ticket.

  3. Values Are Your Secret Weapon Your audience doesn't just buy what you do. They buy why you do it. Are they driven by a need for recognition, like Sarah? Or are they motivated by a desire to prove that growth doesn't have to mean selling out, like Tom? Align your brand with their values, and you'll have more than customers. You'll have a tribe.

  4. The Riches Are in the Niches "But if we narrow our focus, we'll miss out on potential customers!" Wrong. Dead wrong. When you try to appeal to everyone, you appeal to no one. But when you speak directly to a specific group? Magic happens. Don't be afraid to niche down. Be afraid of being forgettable.

  5. Engagement Is Your Reality Check You think you know your audience? Prove it. Get out of your head (and your office). Talk to real people. Slide into their DMs. Join their communities. Don't just guess what they want. Ask them. Then shut up and listen.

"But we're a startup! We don't have time/money/resources for all this audience research!"

Nonsense. You don't have time NOT to do this.

Because here's the brutal truth: The startup graveyard is full of great ideas that nobody wanted. Of solutions looking for problems. Of founders who fell in love with their product instead of their customer.

Don't be one of them.

Your job – your ONLY job – is to solve a real problem for real people better than anyone else.

Everything else is just noise.

So, anxious founder, are you ready to ditch the demographic fairytales and get real about who you're serving and why?

Are you ready to stop shouting into the void and start whispering into the ears of people who are already straining to hear you?

Take our Brand Ambition Quiz. It's not about collecting more data. It's about asking the right questions – the ones that will help you understand not just who your customers are, but why they desperately need you to succeed.

The choice is yours. Keep playing the numbers game and join the 90% of startups that fail. Or start getting real and join the 10% that change the world.

What's it going to be?

Take the Brand Ambition Quiz Now

P.S. Still think you can be everything to everyone? That's what Quibi thought before they burned through $1.75 billion in 6 months. Don't be Quibi. Be the next big thing instead.