⚡ Quick Summary

Skip these two questions and you'll spend a year building something nobody asked for. Before a name, logo, or website — get ruthlessly clear on who your customer is and what specific problem you solve for them. These aren't branding exercises. They're the difference between a business that sells from day one and one that pivots endlessly looking for traction.

🎯 Key Takeaways

  • Define your customer as a specific person, not a demographic u2014 include their exact frustration, what they've tried, and what they'd pay to fix it
  • Write a before-and-after statement for your offer: describe the painful 'before' state and the specific measurable 'after' in two sentences or less
  • Do 15-20 customer interviews before building anything u2014 the exact words people use to describe their problem become your most effective marketing copy
  • Competition in your niche is validation, not a red flag u2014 it proves people are already spending money to solve this problem
  • Trying to serve multiple customer types at launch splits focus without multiplying revenue u2014 pick one, win there first, then expand
  • If you can't explain who you help and what problem you solve in one sentence, the foundation isn't clear enough to build on yet

🔍 In-Depth Guide

How to Get Specific About Who Your Customer Actually Is

A common mistake I see with new entrepreneurs is defining their customer by demographics alone u2014 '25-40 year old women in UAE interested in fitness'. That's a census category, not a customer. What you need is psychographic clarity: what does this person believe about their problem? What have they already tried and why did it fail? What words do they use when they describe their frustration?nnHere's what I tell my course students: go find 15-20 people who look like your ideal customer and ask them one question u2014 'What's the hardest part about [your topic area]?' Record every word they use. Don't paraphrase. When I was building my GoHighLevel course, I interviewed real estate brokers in Dubai and kept hearing the phrase 'leads go cold before I can call them back'. That exact phrase became my marketing copy. It worked because I didn't invent it u2014 I borrowed it from the people I wanted to serve. This research takes one to two weeks. Skip it and you'll spend six months guessing.

Defining the Problem: The Before and After Framework

The clearest way I've found to define what problem you solve is to describe the 'before' and 'after' states of your customer. Before working with you: what is their daily frustration? What are they losing u2014 money, time, clients, confidence? After working with you: what has specifically changed? Put a number on it where possible.nnFor example, one of my clients teaches Canva to small business owners in the Gulf. Her before: 'spending AED 2,000-3,000 a month on a graphic designer for social media posts and still waiting three days for revisions'. Her after: 'designing professional posts in 20 minutes without touching Photoshop'. That before-and-after is her entire marketing message. It fits in one sentence, anyone who matches the 'before' immediately wants the 'after', and she doesn't have to explain why her course is valuable. The problem definition does the selling for her. If you can't write your before-and-after in two sentences, the problem isn't defined clearly enough yet.

Why Answering These Questions Changes How You Build Everything

Once you know exactly who your customer is and exactly what problem you solve, three things happen that would otherwise take years of trial and error. First, you know what to build u2014 the features, modules, or services that directly address that specific problem, nothing else. Second, you know where to find customers u2014 because you know exactly who they are, you know which Facebook groups they're in, which events they attend, which hashtags they use. Third, you know what to charge u2014 because you can calculate what the problem costs them in money or time, and price your solution as a fraction of that.nnI've applied this to my own business multiple times. When I noticed clients in Dubai real estate struggling with AI tools specifically, I built a targeted workshop rather than a generic AI course. Sold out in four days. Not because I was lucky u2014 because I had already done the homework on the two questions. Your action step today: write down your current answer to both questions, then go find five real people who match your customer description and ask them if your problem definition resonates. You'll either be validated or you'll learn something worth knowing.

📚 Article Summary

Most people who come to me wanting to start a business have the same problem: they’ve already picked a name, designed a logo, maybe even built a website — but they haven’t answered the two questions that actually determine whether a business survives. I’ve seen this pattern with clients in Dubai, across real estate, coaching, and e-commerce. They’re building the roof before the foundation.The first question is: Who exactly is your customer? Not ‘everyone who wants to make money’ or ‘small business owners in UAE’. I mean a specific person. Their age, what they stress about at 2am, what they’ve already tried, what they’re willing to pay. Until you can describe your customer more accurately than they can describe themselves, you don’t have a business — you have a hobby with expenses.The second question is: What specific problem are you solving for that specific person? Not a vague ‘I help people grow their business’. What is the exact painful outcome they’re trying to avoid, or the exact result they’re trying to get? When I started teaching GoHighLevel to real estate agents in Dubai, I didn’t say ‘I teach marketing automation’. I said ‘I help real estate agents stop losing leads because they forgot to follow up’. That specificity changed everything — referrals, sales calls, course sign-ups, all of it.These two questions sound simple. They are not. Most people answer them with what they wish were true, not what the market has actually shown them. The real answers come from talking to 20-30 potential customers before you build anything. In my experience training agents and consultants across the Gulf, the ones who do this research first cut their time to first sale by months. The ones who skip it end up pivoting three times in the first year and blaming the market.Answer these two questions with evidence — not assumptions — and you’ll know exactly what to build, how to price it, and what to say when someone asks ‘what do you do?’. Everything else in business is just execution on top of that clarity.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

The two most critical questions are: who exactly is your target customer (not just a demographic, but a specific person with a specific pain), and what specific problem do you solve for them. Most business failures trace back to not having clear, evidence-based answers to both. Answering these before you build anything can save 6-12 months of misdirected effort.
The fastest method is direct interviews u2014 talk to 15-20 people who resemble your potential customer before you build anything. Ask them open-ended questions about their frustrations, what they've tried, and what a solution would be worth to them. Tools like Calendly for scheduling and a simple Google Form for note-taking work fine. The goal is to find the exact words they use to describe their problem so you can reflect those words back in your marketing.
You can start, but you'll struggle to get traction. A broad offering means your marketing speaks to no one strongly enough to act. From working with dozens of coaches and consultants in the UAE and Gulf region, the pattern is consistent: those who niched down to a specific customer and problem got their first paying client in weeks, while those who stayed broad spent months tweaking their website and getting no sales. Niche first, expand later once you have proof.
Specific enough that you could pick them out of a crowd. Go beyond age and location u2014 include their role or occupation, their primary goal in the next 90 days, their biggest obstacle, and what they've already tried. For example: 'a real estate agent in Dubai with 2-5 years of experience, generating 30+ leads a month but losing deals because follow-up is inconsistent'. That's a targetable person. 'Small business owners who want to grow' is not.
Three signals tell you a problem is worth solving: people are already spending money trying to solve it (even imperfectly), they describe it as painful rather than mildly inconvenient, and when you explain your solution they respond with 'I need that' rather than 'that sounds interesting'. Before building a course or service, check if there are existing products, consultants, or communities already addressing the problem u2014 competition is a sign of a real market, not a reason to avoid it.
Start with one. Trying to serve two customer types simultaneously with one business is one of the most common reasons early-stage businesses stall. Different customers have different problems, different vocabulary, different places where they hang out online, and different willingness to pay. Once you've built a profitable, repeatable system for one customer type u2014 typically after 12-18 months u2014 you can responsibly expand. Before that, multiple audiences just split your focus without doubling your revenue.
Sawan Kumar

Written by

Sawan Kumar

I'm Sawan Kumar — I started my journey as a Chartered Accountant and evolved into a Techpreneur, Coach, and creator of the MADE EASY™ Framework.

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