Build Your Fire
Building a company is like building a fire. Most founders fail not because they lack vision, but because they misunderstand their current stage. If you confuse the stages, you burn through capital generating smoke instead of heat.
Smoke is activity without progress. Smoke is revenue from the wrong customers. Smoke looks like a fire from a distance, but it suffocates your chances.
The Four Stages of the Fire
1. Pre-Seed: Find Your Flame
Your job: Turn a thesis into a spark. Nurture that spark until it holds.
You don't have a fire yet. You have a hypothesis. Your job is to kindle one flame and understand exactly why it caught.
- Obsess over your best customers. Find the 100 people who love you despite the bugs. They are the hottest part of your flame.
- Learn faster than you spend. Pivot if you must, but ensure each experiment compounds into the next. Flailing is not pivoting.
- Fire the wrong customers. If they aren't your core, they are oxygen-thieves. Let them go so the spark can breathe.
2. Seed: Grow the Fire
Your job: Take your small flame and grow it into a real fire through focus.
This is the trap stage. Don't start adjacent fires. Don't expand the product for hypothetical users.
- Understand the mechanism. Why does it work? What conditions make it spread?
- Show execution speed. Compounded insights are your real asset.
- The Power of No. Every "yes" to a new opportunity is a "no" to deepening your core expertise.
3. Series A: Build the Machine
Your job: Create systems that let others maintain and grow the fire.
Transition from founder-led sales to a repeatable playbook.
- Operationalize. If you are still the best salesperson and PM in the room, you cannot scale.
- Document the Playbook. Can someone other than you follow your closing process? If not, you aren't ready for the A.
4. Series B+: Pour Gasoline
Your job: Accelerate proven growth and explore new horizons.
Only now, with the infrastructure in place, should you explore adjacent fires. You have the "deep coals" to support complexity.
The Two Fatal Mistakes
Mistake #1: Building for Investors
The temptation: Optimizing for an investor's wishlist. The reality: Investor metrics are lagging indicators. If you optimize for the indicator instead of the fire, the fire dies. Your investors are your second customer. Orient around the first (the user).
Mistake #2: Starting Multiple Fires
The temptation: "Trillion-dollar TAM, we're building for everyone!" The reality: Multiple fires require multiple solutions for multiple problems. It diffuses your resources. Dominance in a niche beats irrelevance in a large market.
The 100-Customer Test
A concrete exercise to run this week:
- Segment Ruthlessly: Who are the evangelists? If you ask 10 of them what you do, and you get 10 different answers, your fire is cold.
- Document the Pattern: Use a simple rubric. What connects these users?
- Know the Stories: Recite their pain points and "aha" moments by heart.
- Make the Cut: Decide who you are going to stop serving.
Stage-Appropriate Pitches
Pre-Seed — The Insight
"We believe [customer] has [problem]. We've run [N] experiments and learned [insight]. We need runway to test [next hypothesis]."
Seed — The Mechanism
"We found our flame with [segment]. It works because of [mechanism]. We're growing it by doubling down on [growth lever]."
Series A — The Predictability
"We've built a $[X] business. We've documented the playbook. We're raising to hire the team that will execute it at scale."
The Bottom Line: The Fire Framework comes down to one question: What stage am I actually in?
The hard part isn't knowing what to do. It's admitting where you actually are. When an investor tries to redirect your focus, you need the conviction to say: "That's not our fire. This is."
Brendan Marshall
Back to beta