Ask HN: B2B, Our idea is nothing unless we find our first pilot

2 samehsbs 2 7/30/2025, 3:23:22 PM
We’re building a B2B product and keep hearing from successful founders that, in the early days, they sent hundreds or even thousands of cold emails—testing different templates, until something resonated and the first company responded.

Right now, we’re facing that same struggle. Not getting replies is frustrating, especially when you're just trying to validate whether your idea is even worth pursuing, but the market won’t give you a shot.

So my questions are: - Do I really need to send hundreds or thousands of emails to validate? - Or if my idea clearly solves a real pain, should I expect replies even in the first batch? - Are companies today just harder to engage, especially with early-stage or pre-seed ideas? - Is it a matter of trust, and if so, how can we overcome that without traction?

Would love to hear how others approached this stage. What worked for you?

Comments (2)

vFunct · 20h ago
You’d have to engage professionally. For b2b, spend a few thousand dollars for a booth at a trade show focused on your industry. You can discuss with dozens of customers there. Also get people to write about you through press releases and PR.
samehsbs · 20h ago
Thanks! I appreciate the suggestion. Trade shows and PR definitely seem like higher-signal channels, but they can be a big upfront investment, especially at pre-seed when we’re still trying to validate whether the problem resonates.

Have you seen early-stage teams successfully land pilots through trade shows, even before they had much built? Or is that route more effective once there’s a demo or MVP to showcase?