Kira Shishkin, founder of Informed.now, built a news product designed to be used for just thirty seconds a day—five bullet points, no images, no feeds. On a recent episode of Startup Stories from the Treehouse, he shared the principles behind this approach. His core lessons: obsess over the problem your customers share, not their demographics. Force a "Day One Hypothesis" and iterate from real feedback rather than waiting for certainty. Use Minimum Viable Information to protect decision-making speed. Make advisors useful by sharing written memos instead of open-ended questions. Trace news and industry information back to primary sources. And narrow your appeal deliberately—filtering out misaligned users upfront saves more than converting them ever will. Unexpected users like farmers and Uber drivers validated the product's real market: anyone who wants to feel informed but hates the news cycle. Listen to the full episode on Startup Stories from the Treehouse and try the product at informed.now.
Kira Shishkin, founder of Informed.now, built a news product designed to be used for just thirty seconds a day—five bullet points, no images, no feeds. On a recent episode of Startup Stories from the Treehouse, he shared the principles behind this approach. His core lessons: obsess over the problem your customers share, not their demographics. Force a "Day One Hypothesis" and iterate from real feedback rather than waiting for certainty. Use Minimum Viable Information to protect decision-making speed. Make advisors useful by sharing written memos instead of open-ended questions. Trace news and industry information back to primary sources. And narrow your appeal deliberately—filtering out misaligned users upfront saves more than converting them ever will. Unexpected users like farmers and Uber drivers validated the product's real market: anyone who wants to feel informed but hates the news cycle.
Listen to the full episode on Startup Stories from the Treehouse and try the product at informed.now.