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What Are The Various Stages Of A Startup?

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One of the most fulfilling journeys anyone can undertake is to begin a startup.  There are a lot of stories about how a startup makes it big in the market and reading them can inspire oneself to undertake a similar journey.  However, beginning a startup and scaling it up is easier said than done as there are multiple stages to running a startup.  Identifying a problem and coming up with a solution is not the only thing which matters when it comes to founding a startup but there are multiple other parameters which need to be considered along the journey.  By looking at the multiple startups which succeeded and the big picture, a startup’s journey can be quantified into stages.  Skipping any of these stages and moving on to the next stage would surely be a setup for a failure.

Read along to find out the various stages in the journey of a startup.

1) Problem discovery

Anybody can come up with an idea but the most important thing is to come up with an idea which solves a particular problem.  This stage is about discovering bottlenecks and problems faced by customers in a market.  This is the stage where a startup needs to focus on what the customer wants rather than what a startup needs to do.  This is where startups need to interview customers to find out the problems they are facing and come up with a solution.  For example, Uber discovered that customers need a simple way to hail a cab and came up with their platform which connects cabs with customers.

2) Ideating

The next stage is to find a value proposition for customers.  This begins by ideating to find opportunities and create good solutions.  There are high chances for good ideas to come up in the discovery stage during the customer interviews as they might provide their own insights and ideas.  By the end of this stage, a startup should be able to come up with a solution which solves a problem by providing a solution which an existing competitor would not provide.

3) Problem/Solution fit

There is a high likelihood of the first solution not being the right solution.  The initial plans might not work out and therefore Plan A should never be assumed as the right solution.  Sometimes the immediate solution will not nudge a customer to make a purchase.  This stage exists to make multiple iterations and if possible pivots into different product models.  During this stage, a startup needs to introduce a product design, clickable prototypes, or product features which the customers can interact with physically.  The initial problem could be solved if customers show interest and prepay for the product or have taken a certain set of actions that you can define based on your product, target and market.  For instance, in the case of freemium models actionables could mean completing a long survey, joining a waitlist and referring X number of people or applying to become a user.

ALSO READ: What Is Seed Funding And What Are The Sources For Seed Funding For Startups

4) Product/market fit

In order to go for a product/market fit, a startup would need data like customer acquisition costs (CAC) and customer lifetime value.  This could only be done with a launched product which is in use.  One of the best indicators for a good product/market fit is acquiring customers at a lower acquisition cost.  A CAC can be calculated by dividing all the costs spent on acquiring more customers (marketing expenses) by the number of customers acquired in the period the money was spent.  For example, if a company spent INR 100 on marketing in a year and acquired 100 customers in the same year, their CAC is  INR 1.  Net Promoter Score (NPS) is one of the easiest ways to measure product/market fit.  Net Promoter Score is the percentage of customers rating their likelihood to recommend a company, a product, or a service to a friend or colleague on a scale of 1-10 with 10 being highly likely and 1 being highly unlikely.

5) Scaling up

This is the stage where a startup needs to focus on diversifying their product offerings.  This is where a startup needs to iterate what is working and put in processes which make these workflows faster.  This is the stage where a company could think of hiring more resources, opening a larger office space and expanding in different areas.  For example when the hyperlocal delivery startup Dunzo began, it was limited to Bengaluru.  However, Dunzo soon expanded to other metropolitan cities to expand their operations and scale up.  

Many startups and entrepreneurs focus on scaling  up rapidly without going through the proper startup lifecycle and often end up in losses.  Building a startup could be fun but it is important to pay attention to each of these steps throughout its journey.  

 

Entrepreneur Stories

What Investor Exits Reveal About the New Age of Indian Startups

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A decade ago, the success of a startup was measured largely by its ability to raise capital. Today, a different metric is gaining importance: the ability to generate meaningful exits for investors. Large stake sales by early backers are becoming increasingly common, not because growth opportunities have disappeared, but because India’s startup ecosystem is entering a more mature phase where capital is expected to complete its full cycle from investment to returns.

This evolution is particularly significant for consumer brands that have successfully blended technology, retail, and strong brand-building. Companies that were once viewed as high-risk startup bets are now attracting institutional investors capable of absorbing large transactions. Such developments indicate that these businesses are no longer being valued solely on future potential; they are increasingly being assessed on operational performance, market leadership, and long-term profitability. In many ways, investor exits are becoming a validation of a company’s ability to create lasting enterprise value.

The broader implication extends beyond a single company or investor. Successful exits encourage more global capital to enter India’s startup ecosystem because they demonstrate that liquidity opportunities exist at scale. As more venture-backed companies approach public listings, secondary transactions, or strategic investments, the focus of founders and investors alike may shift from chasing headline valuations to building durable businesses. The next chapter of India’s startup journey will likely be defined not just by the creation of unicorns, but by the creation of companies capable of delivering sustained returns to all stakeholders.

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Apple MacBook Air M5 Launched: M5 Chip, 22-Hour Battery in India

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Apple has unveiled the new MacBook Air with M5 chip, starting at $999 for 13-inch and $1,299 for 15-inch models. The MacBook Air M5 boasts a 2nm M5 chip with 12-core CPU, 18-core GPU, and 50 TOPS Neural Engine for seamless AI tasks like real-time translation and 8K editing. Up to 22 hours of battery life, Thunderbolt 5, and Wi-Fi 7 make it the ultimate ultraportable, now 10% thinner at 0.44 inches with fanless cooling.

Key MacBook Air M5 features include Liquid Retina XDR display (500 nits, nano-texture option), 12MP Center Stage camera, and six-speaker Spatial Audio. Colors like new Sky Blue join Midnight and Starlight. Pre-orders are live today, with macOS Sequoia 15.4 enhancing Apple Intelligence and iPhone Continuity for students, pros, and remote workers.

Why buy MacBook Air M5 now? It outpaces Snapdragon X Elite rivals with ecosystem magic and future-proof performance, eyeing top 2026 laptop sales. CEO Tim Cook calls it “more capable than ever.” Visit apple.com for M5 MacBook deals and specs.

 

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Zupee Bolsters Short-Video Play with Vertical TV Acquisition Under INR 40 Cr

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Delhi NCR-based gaming startup Zupee has acquired Mumbai-based microdrama platform Vertical TV in a deal valued under INR 40 Cr. This move strengthens Zupee Studio, its short-video arm launched in September 2025, by integrating Vertical TV’s expertise in bite-sized dramas like romance and thrillers.

Facing challenges from India’s 2025 real-money gaming ban, Zupee valued at $1 Bn after raising $120 Mn has pivoted to non-gaming content, including recent layoffs of 40% of its workforce. The acquisition builds on its November 2025 purchase of Australian AI firm Nucanon for interactive storytelling, targeting its 200 Mn+ users with engaging, mobile-first formats.

This deal underscores the rising microdrama trend in India, helping Zupee diversify amid regulatory pressures and compete in the short-video space dominated by quick, shareable content for on-the-go audiences.

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