Raja-Krishna

From Academia to Business: What Changes About “New”

I made that transition. It reverses the sign on the same word.

Academia’s unit of value is contribution — delta from prior art. Business’s unit of value is adoption — delta from doing nothing.

A finding nobody has published is valuable by definition. A product nobody recognizes is a liability by default. Same distance from the known. Opposite payoff.

New products don’t always create a mass category. Sometimes they fail to create even a niche one. The startup world has a name for it: a solution looking for its problem.

Creating something new demands technical merit and financial courage. But what it really demands is a tolerance for unknowns — and they arrive faster than the runway does. If you can name your unknowns and price them, you can attempt a new product as a business. If you can’t, novelty isn’t a strategy. It’s a bet you haven’t read.


10 sales problems to consider before you start:

  1. There’s no budget line for you.
  2. The customer must be taught the problem before he can be sold the solution.
  3. Your comparison set is chosen by the customer — and it’s usually insulting.
  4. No proof exists, because nobody has used it yet.
  5. The buyer and the user are different people. You have to win both.
  6. The demo is the product. There’s nothing to benchmark it against.
  7. Price has no anchor, so price becomes a positioning statement.
  8. Objections are unwritten. You discover them one lost deal at a time.
  9. The sales cycle runs on someone else’s calendar, and you can’t move it.
  10. Every early customer is a support burden, a reference, and a co-designer — simultaneously.

5 freedoms you get nowhere else:

  1. The learning is proprietary. Anyone can copy the object; nobody can copy what you learned building it.
  2. Your competitor is inertia — and inertia doesn’t cut prices.
  3. You choose your own constraints, you set the defaults, and defaults become lock-in.
  4. You’re news, so distribution is briefly free.
  5. Novelty attracts curious minds. It recruits talent that money can’t.

Note the asymmetry: the ten are structural and permanent. The five are perishable — the news cycle ends, the defaults get adopted, the learning gap closes the day a funded competitor hires your designer.

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