Why discovering competitors shouldn’t discourage you as an idea-stage tech founder

Alan Jones
7 min readOct 14, 2024

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A middle-aged professional woman sitting in front of a laptop at a cluttered desk. She’s looking straight into the camera. She’s Anglo, has blonde hair tied back in a ponytail, and she’s leaning forward on her elbows with her arms crossed. In the background is a busy coworking space with high ceilings and large windows. There others working in the background at other desks.
Image credit: ChatGPT

You’ve just come up with the next big thing. You’re excited. You’ve mapped out the basic concept, convinced yourself this is the future, and you’re ready to throw a few years of your life into it. But then, disaster: a quick search or a chat with a startup friend reveals someone else has already built something that sounds similar to your game-changing idea. You’re gutted, wondering if it’s even worth proceeding. Let me stop you right there.

Finding out there’s competition should never discourage you. In fact, if you’re an idea-stage tech founder, it’s a great sign. Here’s why discovering others are in the same space shouldn’t be a reason to throw in the towel. Instead, it can be the validation and motivation you need to pick up your startup idea and run with it.

Competition means validation

Let’s start with the obvious: if someone else is already working on the same problem, it means another startup has evidence there’s a real market need. You didn’t just dream up some completely niche product or service that has no actual demand. There are people out there who also see value in solving the same problem you’re tackling, and that’s great news.

It’s like arriving at a party and realising you’re not the only guest. In a vacuum, it’s easy to assume that your brilliant idea is the product of your genius alone. But if others are already working on similar solutions, it’s a signal that you’re onto something real. Investors look for validation in markets, and being able to show there are multiple players in the space trying to solve the same problem is good validation to have. It’s basically saying, “Hey, this is a thing worth solving.”

It might be intimidating to learn they’re a year ahead of you, to find out they’ve got a team, investors backing them, and customers buying from them, but it also means you could be where they are 12 months from now.

I’ve seen too many founders freak out at the sight of competitors when they should be celebrating. If you’re solving a problem and others are too, then welcome to the game — the market has been at least partially validated for you — add that to your own customer research and validation experiments, and you can focus on whether your spin on this idea has greater or less value to potential customers, saving you time, and saving you money.

Execution matters more than ideas

Ideas are cheap, and execution is everything. This is one of those startup truths that can’t be repeated enough. It’s all well and good to come up with a brilliant idea for an app, platform, or product. But that’s only 1% of the journey. The other 99% is execution, and this is where many founders get it wrong. Just because there’s another startup doing something similar doesn’t mean they’ll execute as well as you will.

Have you heard of the second mover advantage? There are countless examples of companies that were second, third, or even tenth to market and still ended up dominating. Facebook wasn’t the first social network — MySpace, Friendster, and a bunch of others came before it. Google wasn’t the first search engine — remember AltaVista or Inktomi? The difference wasn’t the idea; it was in the execution. These companies iterated on the original concepts and executed better than the competition.

Your unique approach, your team, and your ability to execute are what will set you apart. It’s all about how you listen to customer feedback, adapt, and outpace the others. Don’t worry about who got there first; worry about how you’ll do it better, or differentiate.

The space is rarely fully saturated

When you discover competition, the gut reaction is often, “Well, that’s it. They’ve already got the market, and there’s no room for me.” But that’s rarely the case. Just because there are a few players in the space doesn’t mean the market is fully saturated. In fact, in most cases, there’s still a lot of room for innovation, differentiation, and growth.

Most industries can accommodate multiple players, especially if the problem being solved is significant enough. Even in seemingly crowded markets, there’s usually space for a new player to offer a better, different, or more niche solution. Look at the world of fintech startups or ride-sharing apps. You’d think Uber and Lyft have the ride-sharing space locked down, but countless startups have found success by focusing on specific niches or regions that the big players either ignored or couldn’t effectively serve. In a large and global total-addressable-market, there are often opportunities to build a $100M+ business while remaining a niche player.

As a founder, it’s your job to figure out where the gaps are. What are your competitors missing? Are they too broad in their approach? Too narrow? Missing an industry sector? Only serving enterprise customers? Maybe they aren’t solving the problem in the most elegant way. A little competition forces you to think more critically and creatively about how you’ll differentiate yourself. That’s a good thing.

Early movers often make mistakes

Here’s something you might not have considered: the first movers in a space often make mistakes. They rush to get a product out the door, they burn through cash, or they make assumptions about what the market wants, without enough data to back up those assumptions. You can learn from their mistakes and avoid them.

By studying your competitors, especially if they’ve been in the market for a little while, you can glean insights into what’s working and what isn’t. Maybe they’ve had some success, but their customer reviews point to a key flaw in their product. Or maybe they’ve raised a bunch of money but are struggling to find product-market fit.

Coming in later allows you to benefit from the lessons learned by the early movers. You get to observe, iterate, and build a better version of what they’re offering. Don’t let their head start intimidate you; use it as a free lesson on what to do (and not to do) as you build your own solution.

Your perspective is unique

No two founders approach a problem in exactly the same way. You bring a unique perspective, set of experiences, and vision to your startup that your competitors don’t have. Just because someone else is working on the same problem doesn’t mean they’re approaching it in the same way you are.

Your background, personal frustrations with the problem, and unique insights will lead you to build something that resonates with a specific subset of the market. You might emphasise different features, focus on a different user experience, or build for a different customer segment. Maybe you’ve experienced the problem firsthand and can empathise with your users better than your competition can.

This personal touch, this unique founder insight, is one of your biggest advantages. No one else has your exact perspective, and that will shine through in how you build your product, interact with customers, and position your brand. The same problem can be solved in many ways, and your way could be the one that truly sticks.

Competition keeps you sharp

Let’s face it, competition keeps you on your toes. Without it, you’d be more likely to get complacent, assuming your early idea is good enough to succeed without much iteration. When you know there are others in the race, you’re more likely to push yourself, innovate faster, and listen to your customers more closely.

Healthy competition breeds better products. It forces you to look at your own business with a critical eye, to improve constantly, and to never settle for “good enough.” If you want to outpace your competitors, you’ll need to hustle, make smarter decisions, and execute at a higher level. That’s exactly the kind of mindset you need to have as an early-stage startup founder.

In fact, if you ever find yourself in a space with no competition at all, you should be a little worried. Either there’s no market for your idea, or you’ve got a long, lonely road ahead trying to convince customers they have a problem they don’t yet realise they have. Competition keeps things exciting and motivates you to build something truly great.

Investors love to see competition

This might sound counterintuitive, but investors actually like seeing competition in a space. If you’re pitching to an angel investor or VC and tell them there’s no competition, it’s often a red flag. A lack of competition could suggest that there’s no demand for your solution or that you haven’t done enough market research.

When investors see competition, they see a growing market and an opportunity to back the team that will execute the best. It’s reassuring to them that the problem you’re solving is a real one. What they’ll be looking for is your unique edge, your why us story, and your plan to out-execute the other players.

So don’t be discouraged when you see competition. Use it as a way to build confidence in your market and refine your pitch to show why you’re the best team to take on the challenge.

Final thoughts

Competition is not the enemy — it’s your ally. It validates your idea, sharpens your execution, and pushes you to build a better product. The fact that someone else is already trying to solve the same problem you are is a signal that you’re on the right track. It’s not a sign to quit; it’s a sign to double down, differentiate, and prove that you can execute better than anyone else.

So the next time you discover a competitor, don’t panic. Embrace it. Celebrate it. And then get back to work building something that stands out. Your competitors are out there, but they aren’t you — and that’s your superpower.

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Alan Jones
Alan Jones

Written by Alan Jones

I’m a coach for founders, partner at M8 Ventures, angel investor. Earlier: founder, early Yahoo product manager, tech reporter. Latest: disrupt.radio