Market timing is arguably the most important and least controllable factor in startup success. Bill Gross's study of 200+ companies found that timing accounted for 42% of the difference between success and failure — more than team (32%), idea (28%), business model (24%), or funding (14%).
"Why now?" is the most important question in your pitch. If you can't answer it convincingly, investors will pass.
Key Takeaways
- Timing = 42% of startup success (more than team or idea).
- "Why now?" must have a compelling, specific answer.
- Too early is as dangerous as too late.
- Look for converging trends: technology + regulation + social acceptance.
Case Studies
Uber (2009)
Background: Uber launched when smartphones with GPS became ubiquitous, mobile payments were emerging, and the 2008 recession created a pool of drivers seeking flexible income.
Challenge: Earlier ride-hailing attempts (e.g., taxi apps) failed because smartphones weren't widespread enough.
Solution: Uber timed its launch to the iPhone/Android adoption curve, creating a seamless mobile-first experience.
Result: Grew from 0 to $3.5B revenue in 5 years. Now valued at $150B+.
Technology adoption curves create timing windows. Uber rode the smartphone wave perfectly.
Google Glass (2013)
Background: Google launched Glass as a consumer AR product, pricing it at $1,500.
Challenge: The technology wasn't ready (poor battery, limited apps), social acceptance was low (privacy concerns), and the price was too high for consumers.
Solution: Despite pivoting to enterprise use, Glass was widely seen as a failure and discontinued for consumers.
Result: Lost billions. The AR market only started growing in 2020+ with better technology.
Being too early is as dangerous as being too late. The technology and social acceptance weren't ready.
Zoom (2013)
Background: Zoom launched in 2013, competing with established players like WebEx, Skype, and GoToMeeting.
Challenge: The market seemed saturated with video conferencing tools.
Solution: Zoom focused on reliability and ease of use. When COVID hit in 2020, remote work exploded and Zoom was the best-positioned player.
Result: Revenue went from $623M (2020) to $4.1B (2022). Stock price 10x in months.
Building a great product before the market explodes means you're perfectly positioned when timing aligns. Luck favors the prepared.