If you’re a developer or founder, you already know how to build. The hard part is building the right thing, for the right people, at the right time. In Part 1 of our interview with Samir ElKamouny, we dig into a practical market validation strategy that helps you avoid the most expensive mistake in software: investing months of effort into something the market didn’t ask for.
Samir’s message is refreshingly grounded: big ideas are great, but execution is everything. And execution doesn’t start with code—it starts with clarity, research, and small tests that tell you whether you’re on the right path.
About Samir ElKamouny
Samir ElKamouny is an entrepreneur and marketing expert who believes execution is everything—an early lesson inspired by his father’s legacy of big ideas. He’s helped scale businesses by pairing strategic action with a commitment to impact, guided by values like Freedom, Happiness, Health, Family, and Spirituality. In this episode, that philosophy shows up as practical market validation: test demand and messaging before you overbuild.
Market Validation Strategy: Start With “Is This Real?” Before “Can I Build It?”
One of the biggest mindset shifts Samir reinforces is that your first job isn’t product development—it’s discovery.
Before you worry about features, tech stacks, or perfect UI, you need answers to questions like:
- What problem are we solving—and for whom?
- What alternatives do people already use?
- Why would someone switch (or pay)?
- What would make this stand out in the market?
This is where market research becomes your leverage. It reduces risk, sharpens your messaging, and keeps your roadmap tied to real-world demand instead of assumptions.
Ideas Don’t Win—Execution Wins: You can have a great idea, but if you can’t clearly explain why it matters and who it’s for, you’ll struggle to sell it—even if you build it perfectly.
Market Validation Strategy: Use Market Research to Find Differentiation
Samir talks about loving market research because it forces you to look for what actually matters: differentiation.
A useful way to think about this (especially for builders) is to treat your market research like a product spec—but for the buyer’s brain:
- What are the top 3 pains people complain about?
- What outcomes do they want most?
- What language do they use to describe the problem?
- What do they distrust about existing options?
That last point is gold: distrust is often where your positioning lives. If buyers think “all solutions in this space are overpriced and confusing,” your market edge might be “simple, transparent, and fast to implement.”
Market Validation Strategy: Run the $5/Day Test (Before You Write Code)
Here’s where Samir gets extremely actionable: you don’t need a perfect product to validate interest. You need a simple way to test messaging and capture intent.
Think lightweight experiments:
- a basic landing page with one clear promise
- a short form (“Interested? Tell me your biggest challenge.”)
- a tiny ad budget to test demand and messaging (Samir mentions even $5/day)
- a few direct conversations with the people you’re building for
This isn’t about “launching.” It’s about getting signals—fast.
The Goal Isn’t Perfection—It’s Proof: If people won’t click, reply, or sign up when the idea is explained clearly, a bigger build won’t fix that. Validation comes before optimization.
Market Validation Strategy: Build a Funnel That Matches the Buyer’s Learning Curve
Samir also breaks down why funnels aren’t one-size-fits-all. The funnel you need depends on how much your buyer must be educated before they can decide.
If you’re in a well-known category—say “CRM”—buyers already understand the problem and the solution type. Your job becomes differentiation and trust.
But if your product is new, complex, or requires behavior change, you may need a longer funnel: more education, more examples, more proof, and more clarity before a buyer is ready to act.
Either way, the key is to define the conversion goal (lead, consultation, free trial, signup) and build only what supports that path.
Market Validation Strategy: A 48-Hour Checklist for Builders
Try this quick validation sprint before you commit to a full build:
- Write a one-sentence offer (who it’s for + outcome).
- Build a simple landing page (problem, promise, proof, CTA).
- Run a tiny ad test or post where your audience hangs out.
- Track clicks + form submissions (signals > opinions).
- Talk to 3–5 responders and ask what they expected.
If the message lands, you’ve earned the right to build the next layer. If it doesn’t, you just saved yourself months of building the wrong thing.
Closing Thoughts: Execute Small, Learn Fast, Build Smart
A strong market validation strategy is less about “finding the perfect idea” and more about building the habit of learning quickly. Samir’s approach helps you move from assumptions to evidence—without betting your time, energy, or budget on hope.
So before you spin up a repo, define your offer, test your messaging, and look for real-world signals. Once you have proof, then you can build with confidence—because you’re not just building software. You’re building something people actually want.
In Part 2, we’ll take the next step: how to diagnose funnel bottlenecks, improve clarity, and use smarter testing to increase conversions once you’ve got traction.
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