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Most founders don’t have a marketing problem. They have a system problem.

After watching a lot of early-stage founders struggle with getting clients, I noticed something.
Most assume the problem is marketing. But often the real issue is simpler: there’s no system turning conversations into clients.
People try isolated tactics like cold DMs, posting on X, launching on Product Hunt, or running ads.
But each attempt is disconnected from the next one. There’s no pipeline, no follow-up logic, no structure. So even when interest appears, nothing compounds.
Once a founder builds even a simple system around outreach and follow-up, the exact same effort suddenly starts producing results.
Curious how others here think about this. Did you start with random tactics too? What was the first system that actually worked for your client acquisition?

posted to Icon for group Sales
Sales
on March 14, 2026
  1. 1

    Thanks for sharing this. I’m also learning how sales partnerships and appointment setting work for software/AI services, so this was helpful.

  2. 1

    Fully agreed. The disconnected tactics problem is exactly why we started building automation systems for client acquisition. A founder running cold DMs, posting on social, and following up manually is doing three jobs that a simple pipeline could handle. The founders we work with who break out of the plateau are the ones who stop asking which tactic works and start asking what the whole loop looks like from first touch to booked call. The moment you have that mapped out, the right tactics become obvious. Most people optimize before they systemize.

  3. 1

    @astrawysocka I can relate. Systemic thinking is so key. Yet from my experience...and as a founder too - I see that many founders haven't indetified the real painful constraint/ problem that needs solving. So they try this, then that - getting overwhelmed with various tools. But itn's not the tools and. information which is the problem.. It is the decision fatigue under complexity.

    What do u think on this?

    1. 1

      That “decision fatigue under complexity” part is real.
      Most founders don’t lack tools, they lack a clear flow. So they keep adding more, hoping something clicks.
      A system just removes decisions. You know what happens next, so you execute.
      That’s usually where I start when fixing acquisition.

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