frankly screw being fair...this is business...you have to want it.
It's simple market research. Would you rather spend 6 months hacking together a product just so you don't offend 10 people?
if you always play by the rules you'll never make it. While you spend 6 months to try one idea, and another 6 months for another. Your competitor is going to run 10 tests in 1 week to find the idea that is the most profitable for him.
So by the time you get done with your 2nd test, the other guy has already been in a profitable business for a year.
> if you always play by the rules you'll never make it.
I suspect many people reading this very forum are living proof that you are wrong. Indeed, two of the most popular themes in the experience of successful founders seem to be building mutually beneficial relationships with business contacts and building a trustworthy brand in your market.
In any case, "this is business" is not an excuse for antisocial or unethical behaviour, and a cheap throwaway line is not justification for deliberately messing other people around.
And I'll bet every single one of these bootstrapped entrepreneurs stretched the truth a little to get customers, coverage or funding. Or maybe they spammed a little to get ranked in Google, or maybe they scraped another website for info.
1. where you stretch the rules a little, break the whole "please respect our TOS" thing. Might include spamming a few blogs to get backlinks. Might include posting on HN with 2 accounts. Might include creating a back story to make your startup a lot more interesting. "No really...we wanted to save the world...we didn't even think about the money"
2. white collar crime...telling investors that you have 50,000 users...when in reality you only have 5,000
3. killing people.
If you want to get a bootstrapped startup off the ground...somewhere in the early days...you'll have to break #1.
Frankly I feel like the whole make them fill out an order form to see how many actually want to buy, falls under 0 or .5. Yes it's a dick move...but that's the only way you'll get real market research, instead of getting 100 people to say "yes I'd buy it"...only to find out a year later that when the time comes to pulling out their credit card all of them say "no thanks"
"If you want to get a bootstrapped startup off the ground...somewhere in the early days...you'll have to break #1."
This is baloney and has a higher chance of making great cofounders and hackers (like, for example, Marc Andreessen: http://pmarca-archive.posterous.com/how-to-hire-the-best-peo...) run for the hills rather than work with you. If investors or business partners catch you seriously lying once you are basically permanently blacklisted. You might be able to eke out some kind of business from that black hole, but it is not easy.
"Third and final criterion: ethics.
Ethics are hard to test for.
But watch for any whiff of less than stellar ethics in any candidate's background or references.
is this the same Marc Andreessen that has invested in Digg, where Kevin Rose reported on a site without saying that he actually owns it?
Or maybe it's the same Marc Andreessen that sits on the board of Facebook which did a ton of unethical things to get off the ground?
The bottom line is that if you can think of a successful business...somewhere in it's early days they've done something that would be considered unethical in order to gain traction. The guys who played by the rules when they had nothing are no longer around.
Granted there are probably a few companies that actually survived...but chances are they got extremely lucky.
"Would you rather spend 6 months hacking together a product just so you don't offend 10 people?"
Probably not, if by "offend" you mean "market research", but that is not what I'm talking about. I'm specifically talking about the method you proposed, which I don't find to be fair.
In your question, you seem to imply that "market research" as a whole is offensive, which is not what it seems to me. Look at the Dry Test (the method Tim Ferris wrote about) mentioned up in this thread. It seems fair enough to me, and you still get the email of the people who are interested in your product.
"if you always play by the rules you'll never make it."
I simply don't buy that. Do you really mean never?
I'd rather be not fair to 10 people, than waste 6 months chasing an idea that doesn't work.
Except the dry test won't tell you anything. Cart abandonment rate means that the numbers you get don't mean anything. Your actual sales maybe 10 times less.
If you are bootstrapping then yes...I do mean never. Well there are probably a few exceptions...but that's just pure luck.
It's simple market research. Would you rather spend 6 months hacking together a product just so you don't offend 10 people?
if you always play by the rules you'll never make it. While you spend 6 months to try one idea, and another 6 months for another. Your competitor is going to run 10 tests in 1 week to find the idea that is the most profitable for him.
So by the time you get done with your 2nd test, the other guy has already been in a profitable business for a year.