About to launch the MVP and hitting the classic chicken-and-egg problem.
Travelers won't sign up without packages to carry, senders won't post without travelers available. Every marketplace founder says "focus on one side first" but nobody gets specific about how they actually did it, especially when you can't fake supply like you can with a SaaS landing page.
For those who've built P2P platforms or two-sided marketplaces: what actually worked for your first 50-100 transactions? Did you manually match people? Subsidize one side? Constrain to one route/city?
leros•2h ago
1) Incentivize people on one side to join without the other side. For example Uber paid early drivers money just for signing up even though they had no riders.
2) You provide one side of the marketplace to kickstart the other side. This would be like Uber hiring drivers in the beginning.
This is why starting a two sided marketplace often requires significant capital. They're very hard to start organically.
Another thing I'd suggest is to focus on a niche. Don't try to solve the global problem just yet. Maybe you know a lot of people want to transport books between London and Madrid. Just focus on that to get that market healthy, then add another product or location. This helps you focus your marketing. Also if you go global to start you might have 1000 users on both sides but no matches because everyone is too spread out.
alegd•1h ago
option 1 is trickier when bootstrapped though. How do you incentivize signups without burning money you dont have? Curious if you've seen that work without VC funding behind it
leros•1h ago
garrickvanburen•1h ago
mohsen1•1h ago