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GTM Playbook 8 min read

How to Get Your First 10 Customers: The Playbook Nobody Talks About

Real stories from Stripe, Airbnb, Slack, and Figma — the uncomfortable math, the unscalable tactics, and the five-step playbook that actually works.

4K Labs Original
Based on research from Lenny’s Newsletter, Paul Graham, & Y Combinator

Video created with 4K Labs

How do iconic companies get their start? It’s rarely a scalable playbook. It’s uncomfortable, hands-on, and unforgettable. From Stripe installing code on laptops, to Airbnb photographing apartments by hand, and Slack begging friends to try their beta — the real story begins with pure, unscalable hustle.

The Uncomfortable Math of Customer Acquisition

Before we dive into strategy, let’s face the numbers that nobody wants to hear.

0.2%

typical conversion rate

1,000

contacts for ~2 customers

$300

Dropbox’s failed CAC via ads

Dropbox famously struggled with paid ads — at three hundred dollars per customer for a ninety-nine dollar product, it was a dead end. The first ten customers don’t come from a funnel. They come from founder hustle.

Strategy 1: Start With Who You Know

Your single greatest advantage is your existing network. Here’s how the best companies used it:

Gong

“All of the first dozen customers were some sort of personal connection.” — Co-founder Amit Bendov

Slack

Stewart Butterfield “begged and cajoled” friends at other companies to try it — starting with just 6-10 companies.

Gusto

First 10 customers were friends starting businesses in California — mostly YC peers and personal connections.

Salesforce

Early customers included former colleagues. One was even discovered while a team member was standing in line at a market.

The Takeaway

Your network is your unfair advantage. Exhaust it before trying anything else — friends, former colleagues, investors, accelerator peers.

Strategy 2: Go Where They Already Are

Once you’ve tapped your network, it’s time to fish where the fish are. Go to the online communities your ideal customers already frequent.

Figma

Dylan Field used Twitter data to identify the most influential designers, filtered by people he found inspiring, then cold emailed them or found introductions.

Zapier

Googled app integration questions, found a StackExchange thread, and turned that into their first customer. Their landing pages converted at 50% because they solved an exact problem.

DoorDash

Posted restaurant menus as PDFs with their own phone number on campus sites, then personally delivered the orders.

Strategy 3: The Cold Outbound Machine

When customers aren’t in forums, deploy the cold start engine. Cold outreach is the second most common way successful B2B startups land early customers, according to Lenny Rachitsky’s research.

Cold Email
5-10%

average reply rate

LinkedIn Outreach
10%+

reply rate (2x email)

The Multiplier Effect

Combine LinkedIn and email in a personalized cadence, and response rates jump by 287%. Deeply personalized emails (not just merge tags) drive 52% higher replies.

Strategy 4: Do Things That Don’t Scale

Paul Graham’s most famous advice. The things that feel “too manual” are often exactly what you should be doing.

Stripe — The “Collison Install”

When someone showed interest, the Collison brothers didn’t send a link. They said “give me your laptop” and set them up on the spot.

Airbnb — Door-to-Door Photography

Founders went to NYC, helped hosts improve listings, and personally photographed apartments. Weekly revenue went from $200 → $400 → $1,400.

Wufoo — Handwritten Notes

Sent every single new user a handwritten thank-you note — for as long as they possibly could.

“I have never once seen a startup lured down a blind alley by trying too hard to make their initial users happy.” — Paul Graham

The Follow-Up Is Everything

Getting a conversation started is only half the battle. Here’s the stat that changes everything:

60% of customer wins happen after the 2nd, 3rd, or 4th follow-up

Yet most founders give up after just one email. Build a structured 10-touch cadence over 4-6 weeks: LinkedIn invite → call → “why you, why now” email → another call → something unexpected.

Choose the Right First Customers

Not all early customers are equal. You’re looking for what investors call “design partners” — users willing to collaborate so closely that they’re effectively co-designing the product with you.

The right first customers help you build a better product, not just bigger revenue.

The First 10 Customers Playbook

Your Five-Step Sequence
1

Exhaust your network — friends, former colleagues, investors, accelerator peers

2

Go where they are — forums, communities, Twitter, Slack groups, events

3

Build a cold outbound system — LinkedIn + email with deep personalization

4

Do things that don’t scale — install it yourself, photograph their apartment, send the note

5

Follow up relentlessly — 60% of wins happen after the second touch

Your Turn to Hustle

Every billion-dollar company, every game-changing product, started this way. There is no automated playbook on day one. Stripe, Airbnb, Slack, Figma — none of them had a scalable system when they started. They had founders willing to do the work nobody else would.

Your first ten customers won’t come from a viral launch or a marketing funnel. They’ll come from you — showing up, reaching out, and making it personal.

Your future customers are already out there, waiting to hear from you. Start today.

Sources & Further Reading

4K Labs
4K Labs
Original research & video created with 4K Labs
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