Sometimes, you start with bait and a rod and you'll ask: "What fish can I catch with these?" The business equivalent is starting with a product idea, and asking: "What kind of customers can I attract to this?" It's definitely harder to do it this way.
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There is a lot of hyperbole in that statement, I’ve never seen every hotel room in NYC booked.

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I believe this actually happened in San Francisco. (the founders are from NYC?)pic.twitter.com/Mt8SP1Yqi6
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Not sure it's possibly to usefully debate this when you can re-define both 'niche' and 'market' to match survivorship bias. Particularly challenging in tweets.
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Airbnb succeeds. Market = 'people who need a place to stay' (or is it people who'll sleep on air mattress in a random house). Juicero fails. Market = people who want cold-pressed juice, won't go to a store & have lots of $$ (or, humans who need nutrients & consume liquids)

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Wydaje się, że ładowanie zajmuje dużo czasu.
Twitter jest przeciążony lub wystąpił chwilowy problem. Spróbuj ponownie lub sprawdź status Twittera, aby uzyskać więcej informacji.
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That means with the right bait and the right skill, you can catch fish too.
By the time ConvertKit showed up, MailChimp had already caught millions of fish. But that just meant it was a good fishing spot.
The opportunity existed because all the hotel rooms were booked up.
Their history, from the beginning, is about being in the same market as hotels.