At this early stage, it’s not about polished product or traction — it’s about insight and edge.
What makes your solution meaningfully different?
MOST IMPORTANTLY: What makes you and your team uniquely positioned to build and deliver it?
This is where we assess your Founder’s Edge — that sharp, earned insight into the market, the user, or the problem that others haven’t cracked yet.
And yes, it’s really about the team.
Great founders will iterate, adapt, and even pivot — because they Get it, Want it, and have the Capacity to execute (GWC – EOS). Weak teams? They’ll fumble even with a great product in their hands.
You’re not just selling your idea — you’re proving you’re the team to run with it.
This isn’t about hype. It’s about clarity of thinking, focus, and early signs of execution strength.
Purpose
- Identify what sets you apart at the concept stage — insight, access, or unique angle.
- Test whether your team has the credibility and capacity to execute on this edge.
- Frame the “why us” slide of your pitch deck — beyond the product.
- Pressure-test whether this difference is real, relevant, and resonant.
When to Complete
- Once you can clearly describe existing alternatives your users rely on.
- Before finalizing an MVP design — edge informs execution.
- Before investor meetings where you’ll be asked: “Why you, not someone else?”
Proof Sections
What Are the Alternatives?
- Name the tools, services, or behaviors users rely on today.
- These include direct competitors, indirect workarounds (Excel, consultants), or inertia (doing nothing).
- B2B SaaS: “Small manufacturers still run production scheduling in Excel; enterprise software exists, but it’s too expensive and complex for them.”
- B2C CPG: “Shoppers reach for big-brand protein bars despite high sugar content, while DIY options (home baking, supplements) are messy and inconsistent.”
- Services: “Local retailers juggle deliveries with part-time staff and manual routing — larger logistics firms won’t touch low-volume clients.”
What Makes You Different?
- Describe your founder theory of edge — logical, testable, not yet proven.
- Avoid generic claims (“better UX”) unless you explain how it matters.
- B2B SaaS: “We’re the only CRM built for contractors who work offline first — not desk-based sales teams.”
- B2C CPG: “Our snacks are formulated specifically for diabetics, where every mainstream competitor ignores glycemic load.”
- Services: “We focus solely on mid-sized law firms, a segment overlooked by both large consultants and generic IT providers.”
How Will You Execute That Edge?
- Highlight the team’s unique skill or background.
- Even if the product isn’t real yet, your angle is real — and must be executable.
- B2B SaaS: “Our CTO built similar workflow tools at Salesforce, giving us deep pattern recognition in scaling SaaS.”
- B2C CPG: “The founder previously launched a beverage brand into Target — knows retail playbooks cold.”
- Services: “With 15 years running logistics for regional distributors, the founder already has trusted access to first clients.”
Optional: Defensibility Hypothesis
- How might this become a lasting moat?
- Early signals of future defensibility could include network effects, data, switching costs, or partnerships.
- B2B SaaS: “As more contractors use the platform, their workflow data creates benchmarks competitors can’t replicate — reinforcing network effects.”
- B2C CPG: “Retail partnerships with national grocery chains secure prime shelf space, making it harder for new entrants to displace us.”
- Services: “Our cooperative delivery network builds long-term contracts and shared infrastructure, creating high switching costs for restaurants.”
Execution Requirements
- Clear articulation of existing alternatives (direct and indirect).
- A concise founder theory of edge — logical and testable.
- Evidence of team capability to deliver on that edge.
Domain Adaptability: Moderate
- B2B SaaS / Software Products
- Edge often comes from workflow insight or technical capability.
- Example: “Former Salesforce engineers targeting underserved SMB sales ops.”
- B2C Consumer Packaged Goods
- Edge can be brand, distribution, or cultural resonance.
- Example: “Ex-Nike marketer launching a wellness snack aligned to Gen Z health trends.”
- Services / Ops-Heavy Models
- Edge is usually credibility, process efficiency, or relationships.
- Example: “20 years in local logistics gives founder unmatched trust with manufacturers.”
Expected Output
- 2–3 paragraphs or a bullet-point narrative.
- Optional: competitive landscape table or Google Doc.
- Focus on your thinking, not a SWOT chart.
Linked Asset
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Optional Enhancements (Pro-Level Execution)
- Competitor Comparison Grid — One-pager showing gaps/white space.
- Founder Resume Edge Map — Visual linking team experience to execution angle.
- Defensibility Sketch — A 1-year-out vision of how your edge strengthens with growth.
- Customer Quote Sheet — Direct words from users validating your differentiator.

