The Customer Feedback Myth
This post contains affiliate links. If you purchase through them, I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.
"If I had asked people what they wanted, they would have said faster horses." — Henry Ford (probably apocryphal, but still instructive)
Every startup founder hears it: Talk to your customers. Get feedback. Build what they want. It's gospel in entrepreneurship circles. The Lean Startup, customer development, Jobs to Be Done — all rooted in the same core belief.
But here's what they don't tell you: **customers are terrible at knowing what they want.**
The Problem with Direct Questions
Ask someone what they want, and you'll get one of three responses:
- What already exists — "A better version of [competitor]"
- Incremental improvements — "Faster, cheaper, easier"
- Fantasy solutions — "An app that reads my mind"
None of these are useful. The first is competitive positioning, not innovation. The second is optimization, not differentiation. The third is science fiction.
The reason? **People optimize for what they know.** They can't envision solutions that don't exist yet. They can only describe problems in terms of current solutions.
What to Ask Instead
Forget "What do you want?" Ask these instead:
1. "Walk me through the last time you did [task]."
Concrete, recent behavior beats hypothetical preferences. You're looking for friction points, workarounds, and frustration. Watch what they do, not what they say they do.
2. "Why did you choose [solution] over [alternative]?"
This reveals actual decision criteria — which are often different from stated preferences. Someone might say "price matters most" but choose the expensive option for convenience.
3. "What's the hardest part of [problem]?"
Don't ask about features. Ask about pain. The hardest parts are where the opportunity lives.
4. "What have you tried already?"
This tells you what solutions they've already rejected — and why. It also shows you how much pain they're willing to endure. If they haven't tried anything, the problem isn't urgent.
The Real Skill: Observation
Steve Jobs famously said: "People don't know what they want until you show it to them." He wasn't being arrogant. He was describing a fundamental truth about innovation.
Breakthrough products don't come from surveys. They come from **observing behavior, identifying unmet needs, and building something people didn't know they were missing.**
Airbnb didn't ask people "Would you sleep in a stranger's house?" They observed that hotels were expensive and impersonal, people had spare rooms, and trust could be engineered through design.
Uber didn't ask "Do you want a taxi app?" They observed that calling cabs was unpredictable, payment was awkward, and smartphones made real-time coordination possible.
The Exception: Iteration
Once you have a product, feedback becomes invaluable — but only if you know how to interpret it.
- Feature requests? Look for the underlying need, not the surface solution.
- Complaints? Gold. These are real pain points you can fix.
- Usage data? Even better than words. See what people actually do.
Early-stage startups obsess over features. Mature products obsess over behavior.
The Takeaway
Customer feedback isn't bad. But **direct questions about what people want are almost useless for innovation.**
Instead:
- Observe behavior, not opinions
- Ask about past experiences, not future desires
- Look for pain, not preferences
- Trust data over declarations
Because if Henry Ford had asked his customers what they wanted, we'd all be riding very fast horses. 🐎
Want to learn more about building products people actually want? Check out The Lean Startup Blueprint — a practical guide to testing ideas, finding product-market fit, and avoiding the most common startup mistakes.