Apply these new acquisition rules before they change again

Welcome to The Current.


This is where we gather real founder conversations to track what’s on their radar right now.

This month, the focus has shifted from trying to reach everyone to finding the specific few who actually care. Founders are moving away from broad, expensive marketing and instead focusing on smarter, more targeted ways to find – and filter – their first users.

3 Things Founders Talk About In May’ 26

  • Filters that prove demand

    A button click doesn’t mean much anymore. Between AI bots and “polite” interest, traditional waitlists have become full of junk data.

    Founders are now adding tiny “speed bumps” immediately after the click – like a $1 deposit or a quick survey. It filters out the noise and ensures you are only building for people who are actually desperate for your solution.

  • Borrow the stage for your first 70% of reach

    The “Post and Pray” model is a legacy trap. Building an audience from scratch in 2026 is the slowest path to market. Instead of shouting into an empty feed, founders are spending 70% of their energy as the highest-value guest in rooms that already exist.

    Whether it’s a viral LinkedIn thread or an industry panel, they are hijacking existing attention streams to capture their first 70% of reach from other people’s audiences before ever building their own.

  • Own 40% of the room before you expand

    Founders are rejecting the “mass market” dream in favor of total saturation in a micro-niche. The new rule is to refuse any expansion until you achieve 40% penetration in one specific, targeted community.

    You don’t need a million users to start; you just need to be the only name everyone in that one specific room is talking about.

The Reality Check

Dr. Jean-Paul Valdes

Chief Operating Officer 

MADCash

 

 

MADCash is a micro-finance company targeting a very niche group of female micro-business owners. To ensure we are reaching high-intent founders, we built a natural gateway system where applicants are required to complete our training program before accessing funds. This intentional friction acts as a filter that increases the level of commitment compared to an open-market approach, ensuring we only lend to those who are actually conducting a business right now.

 

 

Once we have identified that committed audience, we build reach from an authoritative perspective by inserting our voice into existing industry conversations. Our founder, Aizah, is frequently invited onto panels and industry-led discussions regarding women’s empowerment and the complexities of this specific market base. By participating in these established ‘rooms,’ we are able to connect with our audience through high-level expertise and effectively borrow the stage from larger platforms.

 

 

This strategy for niche dominance is anchored in specifically targeting the underserved or the overlooked. These founders often don’t qualify for traditional financial institutions simply due to the nature of how their businesses are run. By focusing strictly on this particular group, we have essentially created a defensive moat – securing a position that is otherwise ignored by mass-market players.

 

 

Running a community-driven business like Autosave means lots of lead sorting, community responses, content generation, and posting at peak hours. This is where we use AI not for the flashy, cutting-edge automations you see on LinkedIn, but for removing friction from daily operations. If something is repeated every day, that’s where AI should go first.

 

And yes, scaling isn’t always glamorous. If something is draining your mental energy on repeat, that’s your sign to automate it. We use templates and workflows to remove decision fatigue, and I chat with AI to brainstorm ideas and map out new workflows. Burnout kills more startups than bad ideas alone – protecting your stamina is more underrated than most founders realise.

 

The Bottom Line

“By focusing on the overlooked, you create a niche that isn’t being served – one that captures the large, unaddressed demand that traditional institutions are missing.”