Is this a thing? I’m doing some market research on some competitors in a niche, and a few of them are listing massive customer numbers (10,000+) on their sites that don’t seem to line up. This is in a 90% B2B, 10% B2C vertical.

From my due diligence, the competitors in question are small startups, that have been around for less than a few years. They don’t have VC funding that could explain the massive customer base vis-a-vis their headcount, and the customer / brand logos they have listed on their sites seem tangentially related to this vertical, at best.

From what I know about sweat equity, it can take decades to build up a thousand customers - yeah, you can do that warp speed with VC funding and the right sales team / strategy - but these numbers don’t add up. For what it’s worth, if you’re in a majority B2B space and have 10K+ customers, odds are we would have heard about you through the grapevine.

Is this commonplace, for startups (or businesses in general) to artificially inflate their customer base on a marketing site or claim customers that they don’t actually have based on the vertical? (for example, a wedding planning software claiming a law enforcement agency as their customer, wildly impractical). Is this even legal to make these claims?

Note: this is nothing I want to do, just trying to understand if this is just how the kool kids do marketing these days.

  • researchmindopc@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    Unfortunately most startups do this not only the new but also bigger names. Few smart ones have been even able to fool marquee investors (putting question marks on their due diligence process).

    People think floating startups are like printing $$$ which in reality needs extraordinary commitment.