As a more concrete example, let's say I am creating some software to help people with their mental health journey.
What market do I target? At a high level, two options come to mind:
- Those who have identified a want for mental health assistance, are currently suffering, and are searching for tools to mitigate.
- Those who have not identified a want for mental health assistance, are currently suffering, and are worsening.
Objectively, I am far more interested and concerned for those in the latter group. They are in a more vulnerable position and stand to benefit more from my efforts, but they are also more difficult to sell solutions. The former is looking to be sold, which is alluring, but I am not as worried for them because they have enough self-awareness to identify their personal needs and are seeking solutions.
In talking to people, I've come to the conclusion that a solution for one group will look markedly different than a solution for the other. Those seeking assistance expect self-help language to exist in the software and are emboldened by it, but, conversely, those not yet searching are repulsed by the direct language and need a softer approach. It doesn't seem reasonable to dedicate an MVP to the former market with the hope of pivoting to encompass the latter.
My gut says capitalism is too ruthless to tolerate pursuit of the less valuable market for an MVP and that the only viable approach is to chase the money and then, once ~stable, tolerate losses in the pursuit of rebalancing the business model more towards altruism.
Does that sound right to you? What comes to your mind when you consider the difficulties in balancing altruism with a strong business model?
I.e. use a comprehensive view that embraces the two poles organically.