Startup Guide

Your First 10 Customers in India: A Field Guide

Your First 10 Customers in India: A Field Guide Getting your first 10 customers in India is   Your First 10 Customers in India: Getting your first 10 customers in India is weirdly hard. Not because India lacks customers. It is the opposite. There are too many. Too many segments, too many price points, too many languages, too many “bhaiya ek call pe aao” moments. And early on, your product is usually not even the main issue. It is distribution. Trust. Proof. And you, as a founder, learning how to sell without sounding like you are selling. This is a field guide. Not theory. Not “growth hacks”. Just the stuff that actually gets you to the first 10. The scrappy, slightly uncomfortable, very real stuff. Before we start, one mindset shift. Your first 10 customers are not a “small version” of your future company. They are a research lab that pays you. Treat them like that. 1. Your First 10 Customers in India: Pick one narrow customer. One. Not “everyone in India”. If you are selling to “SMEs” or “students” or “D2C brands”, you are basically selling to nobody. India forces clarity. Pick a tiny slice like: CA firms with 5 to 20 staff in Tier 1 cities Instagram store owners doing 2 to 10 lakhs a month Independent gyms in Mumbai suburbs College placement cells in private engineering colleges Clinics with one doctor and one receptionist Say it out loud. If it sounds too specific, good. A useful filter: can you list 50 of them from memory or with a little Googling? If yes, you have a target. Also read: A-pre-launch-checklist-for-indian-startups-no-fluff 2. Your First 10 Customers in India: Decide your “first 10 offer”. It is not your final pricing. Most founders price like they are already a brand. You are not. Yet. In India, early customers are taking social risk. They are betting on you. They need to feel like the bet is worth it. So create a first 10 offer: Pilot pricing for 30 days Founding customer plan with extra support Pay after results for a fixed outcome Setup fee waived if they give a testimonial Annual plan at monthly price if they commit early Keep it simple. One page. One WhatsApp message. One line they can forward. Your First 10 Customers in India: A good first 10 offer has 3 parts: The promise (what changes for them) The proof you will create together (case study, numbers, testimonial) The safety (cancel anytime, refund, no lock in) 3. Build a list of 100 leads manually. Yes, manually. You cannot automate trust. Your first 100 leads should come from places where Indian businesses already hang out: Where to find leads fast Google Maps (search “dentist”, “interior designer”, “tuition centre”) Justdial and IndiaMART (old school, still works) LinkedIn (filter by city, title, company size) Instagram (search by location and hashtags) Facebook groups (local business groups are chaotic but alive) WhatsApp groups (if you are in, you are in) Make a simple sheet: Name Business name City Phone/WhatsApp Why they are a fit Status (contacted, replied, call booked, closed) It feels slow. Then suddenly it compounds. 4. Use the “India friendly” outreach script (short, specific, non cringe) Long cold emails are dead here. People will not read your origin story. In India, founders win with short, respectful, direct messages. WhatsApp first message template Hi {Name}, I saw {business name} on Google. Quick one. We help {similar businesses} get {outcome} in {timeframe}. Can I ask 2 questions to see if this is even relevant for you? No sales pitch. If they say yes, send the two questions. Do not jump to demo. Example questions: “How are you doing {process} today?” “What is the biggest headache with it?” “If you could fix one thing this month, what would it be?” This works because it feels human. And it gives them control. Indians hate being trapped in a sales call. 5. Do calls like a doctor. Diagnose first. Prescription later. Your first 10 calls are not demos. They are discovery sessions. A simple call flow that works: Context: “Tell me about your business. How do you get customers today?” Current process: “How do you handle {the thing} right now?” Pain: “What breaks, what wastes time, what costs money?” Impact: “If this stays the same for 6 months, what happens?” Desire: “In an ideal world, what would this look like?” Permission: “Want me to show you how we’re solving it?” Then only show the relevant part of the product. Not everything. If you do a full product tour, you will lose them. Too much info, too little relevance. 6. You need one wedge. One strong entry point. A wedge is a small use case that gets you inside the customer’s workflow. In India, wedges win because people don’t want to change everything at once. Examples: For a marketing tool: start with WhatsApp follow ups, not full funnel automation For a finance product: start with invoice reminders, not full accounting migration For B2B SaaS: start with one department, not company wide rollout For services: start with one campaign, one month, one outcome Your wedge should be: easy to start low risk fast visible value If your time to value is 30 days, your first 10 will be slow. Try to get it to 7 days. Even 48 hours. 7. Take money earlier than you feel comfortable This is going to annoy some people but it is true. If they do not pay, you do not have a customer. You have a user. Or worse, a fan. India has a lot of “interested” people. They will happily take free work. They will also disappear without guilt. So ask for payment once you have clarity. A clean line: If we can deliver {outcome} in {time}, the fee is ₹{amount}. We start with ₹{small amount} to kick off, rest after {milestone}. Even ₹999 matters. It changes the relationship. 8. Use “trust stacking”. India runs on proof. In India, people