Product Market Fit

Product Market Fit

Share this post

Product Market Fit
Product Market Fit
The biggest mistake Startups make. How Apple, Amazon and In-N-Out-Burger avoid it
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More

The biggest mistake Startups make. How Apple, Amazon and In-N-Out-Burger avoid it

Guillermo Flor's avatar
Guillermo Flor
Aug 25, 2024
โˆ™ Paid
15

Share this post

Product Market Fit
Product Market Fit
The biggest mistake Startups make. How Apple, Amazon and In-N-Out-Burger avoid it
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More
1
Share

Hey everybody welcome back to the Product Market Fit Newsletter ๐Ÿš€

My name is Guillermo Flor and I write this weekly newsletter to help founders, growth professionals and product people to grow & fund their companies.

But, as always, before starting lets get hyped with some beats ๐Ÿ”ฅ

Product Market Fit is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.


  1. Join The Product Market Fit Community๐Ÿ‘‡

Join PMF Community

  1. Inboundโ€™s new website is out. Shout out to my boy Dawid Wadach for the design! If you need a website designer/developer, he is the man๐Ÿ‘‡

    DM me with feedback!


Alright, so today I wanted to talk about the Woman in the Red Dress aka the Shiny Object Syndrome.

I liked Alex Hormoziโ€™s approach to it and decided to write about it.

If youโ€™ve seen The Matrix, you know what Iโ€™m talking about. Thereโ€™s this scene where Neo, the main character, is walking through a crowd with Morpheus.

Everythingโ€™s normal, just a bunch of people going about their day, and then suddenly, Neo spots this woman in a red dress.

Sheโ€™s stunning, and his head turns. Heโ€™s completely distracted. Morpheus keeps talking, trying to teach him a lesson, but Neoโ€™s not listening. Heโ€™s focused on the woman.

When Morpheus tells him to look again, Neo does, and bamโ€”sheโ€™s gone. In her place is Agent Smith, ready to take him out.

Now, hereโ€™s the deal: In business, the Woman in the Red Dress is that shiny new opportunity that looks amazing.

Itโ€™s that new idea, that exciting project, that tempting side hustle. Itโ€™s the thing that makes you think, โ€œThis could be huge.โ€

But just like in the movie, itโ€™s a distraction, and if you keep chasing her, youโ€™re going to miss whatโ€™s really important.

Why the Woman in the Red Dress Wrecks Businesses ๐Ÿ’ฃ

  1. She Pulls You Away from Your Core Focus:

    The Shiny Object Syndrome: Don't Let It Kill Your Side Hustle Dream | by  Muchina T.K | New Writers Welcome | Medium


    When youโ€™re starting out, youโ€™ve got this one thing that youโ€™re good at, that you know works. But then the Woman in the Red Dress shows upโ€”maybe itโ€™s a new business idea, a new product, whateverโ€”and suddenly, your focus is split.

    Youโ€™re no longer putting everything into that one thing thatโ€™s actually making you money. Instead, youโ€™re chasing after something new, thinking itโ€™s going to be the next big thing. But hereโ€™s the truth: while youโ€™re distracted, your main business starts to suffer.

    It doesnโ€™t get the attention it needs to grow, and before you know it, youโ€™re struggling on all fronts.

  2. The Bigger You Get, The Hotter She Looks:


    As your business grows, the distractions donโ€™t just go awayโ€”they get bigger, more tempting.

    At first, youโ€™re saying no to a few opportunities, but as you grow, youโ€™ve got to say no to hundreds, thousands.

    And the thing is, the bigger you get, the more attractive these distractions become. They promise quick wins, faster growth, but theyโ€™re just pulling you away from what really matters: doing the basics right, every single day.

  3. She Makes You Think You Can Do It All:

    Shiny New Toy Syndrome


    Hereโ€™s where a lot of entrepreneurs mess up. They see the Woman in the Red Dress and think, โ€œI can handle this.

    I can juggle multiple businesses, multiple projects.โ€ But the reality is, you canโ€™t. Not at the level you need to. If youโ€™re trying to do five different things, none of them are going to be great. Youโ€™re just going to end up with a bunch of mediocre projects instead of one outstanding business. And thatโ€™s how you loseโ€”because while youโ€™re spreading yourself thin, someone else is out there focusing on one thing and doing it better than you.

  4. She Makes You Forget the Basics:

    The Iterative Approach - Startup Success Blueprint


    The Woman in the Red Dress makes the basics seem boring. Sheโ€™s all about the new, the exciting, the innovative.

    But hereโ€™s the thingโ€”business isnโ€™t about constantly chasing the new. Itโ€™s about doing the basics, and doing them well.

    Itโ€™s about refining your processes, training your team, improving customer service. The boring stuff. But thatโ€™s the stuff that actually grows your business. When you get distracted by the Woman in the Red Dress, you start to neglect these things, and thatโ€™s when your business starts to fall apart.

  5. She Tricks You Into Thinking Innovation is Everything:

    Beware of Shiny Object Syndrome (SOS)

    Donโ€™t get me wrongโ€”innovation is important. But itโ€™s not everything. The Woman in the Red Dress makes you think that if youโ€™re not constantly innovating, youโ€™re falling behind.

    But the truth is, most business success comes from doing the things you know you should be doing, but arenโ€™t.

    Itโ€™s about execution, not just ideas.

    Youโ€™ve got to stick to the basics, do them better than anyone else, and keep doing them over and over again. Thatโ€™s how you win.

How Apple, Amazon and In-N-Out-Burger avoid the woman in the red dress

Keep reading with a 7-day free trial

Subscribe to Product Market Fit to keep reading this post and get 7 days of free access to the full post archives.

Already a paid subscriber? Sign in
ยฉ 2025 Guillermo Flor
Privacy โˆ™ Terms โˆ™ Collection notice
Start writingGet the app
Substack is the home for great culture

Share

Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More