When Customer Obsession Backfires: The Netflix vs. BlackBerry Lesson for Founders
How to distinguish temporary customer truths from permanent needs—and build the judgment to scale beyond product‑market fit.
TL;DR: Your deep customer knowledge is sabotaging your growth. The Einstellung effect—where expertise blinds to better solutions—explains why BlackBerry died clutching their keyboards while Netflix thrived ignoring DVD lovers. But here's the paradox: you need customer feedback to find product-market fit, then need to disregard it to find your next act. The key isn't abandoning frameworks—it's using them to develop judgment about which customer truths are temporary versus permanent. Warning sign: when you can predict every request, you're missing the next revolution.
Mike Lazaridis knew what business professionals wanted. The BlackBerry founder spent a decade perfecting enterprise email, achieving 50% market share among Fortune 500 companies by 2009. His customer development was flawless—IT departments loved the security, executives praised the keyboard, and RIM's stock hit $236. Then, Steve Jobs unveiled a phone without a keyboard, enterprise features, or email focus. Lazaridis dismissed it as a toy. Five years later, BlackBerry's market share collapsed to 0.5%. The expertise that built an empire blinded him to its destruction.
Here's the pattern that kills scaling startups: The better you understand your current customers, the worse you are at seeing new opportunities. Psychologists call this the Einstellung effect—when expertise creates cognitive blindness. For founders who've just found product-market fit, it's not a flaw. It's an existential threat.
The Chess Master's Blindness (And Why Timing Matters)
In 1942, psychologist Abraham Luchins discovered something disturbing about expertise. He gave chess masters and beginners the same puzzle. The beginners often found the optimal solution faster. Why? The masters' experience triggered instant pattern recognition, causing them to fixate on familiar but suboptimal moves. Their expertise had become limiting.
Luchins didn't mention that novice chess players lose more games. The Einstellung effect only becomes dangerous after achieving competence, which for founders is between $1-5M ARR—enough customer data but not enough market coverage. Before product-market fit, ignoring customers is detrimental. After, following them blindly might be worse.
Reed Hastings understood the timing. When Netflix hit 1 million DVD subscribers in 2003, customer surveys showed 90% satisfaction. Focus groups wanted more DVD features. Hastings noticed something his customers couldn't articulate: broadband adoption was doubling annually. His customers were giving perfect feedback for 2003. He needed to build for 2007.
Founder Takeaway #1: Customer feedback tells you how to optimize the present. Market physics tells you where the future is heading. Learn to distinguish between the two.
The Paradox of Valid Blindness
The Einstellung effect: BlackBerry's enterprise customers needed physical keyboards for email-heavy workflows and enterprise-grade security. In 2007, the iPhone was worse for their use case. Lazaridis wasn't misguided—he was serving his market.
The problem? He confused temporary customer truths with permanent human needs. In 2007, enterprise customers needed keyboards because touchscreen typing was inadequate. But the permanent need was "efficient communication," not "physical keyboards." When touchscreen technology improved, the temporary truth evaporated. The permanent need remained.
Netflix navigated this by distinguishing between delivery mechanisms (temporary) and core desires (permanent). DVD customers wanted "more selection" and "faster shipping"—temporary truths tied to physical media. Their permanent need was "entertainment on demand." Streaming better met the permanent need, despite being temporarily worse at delivery.
You can develop this skill, the distinction between temporary truths and permanent needs. It's not mystical founder intuition. It's systematic observation paired with technological awareness.
Founder Takeaway #2: Every customer request contains temporary and permanent truths. The frameworks below will help you decode them.
When to Trust, When to Question
The brutal truth about founder intuition is that it's most reliable when you start questioning it. Peak pattern recognition occurs around these milestones:
20-50 customers: You've found a niche but mistaken it for the market.
$1-5M ARR: Early success creates misleading confidence in your model
Post-Series A: Investor validation supports existing assumptions
50+ employees: Organizational inertia makes pivots seem unachievable.
Airbnb hit this inflection at 50,000 bookings. Their model worked for budget travelers, generating consistent 20% monthly growth. When Brian Chesky started staying in listings, he discovered hosts were creating experiences that went beyond their "cheap lodging" positioning. The $1,000/night villa that violated their assumptions, represented a parallel market they'd ignored.
The question isn't whether to trust customers. The question is which represent your future versus your past. Budget travelers were Airbnb's past. Experience seekers were their future. Both gave valid feedback. Only one pointed toward a $75 billion valuation.
Try-This-Today: Map your customer segments by time horizon. Current revenue drivers = present. Tiny but rapidly growing segments = future. If 90%+ of feedback comes from present-focused customers, you're driving using only the rearview mirror.
The Judgment Development System
Here's how to build the judgment that separates Netflix from BlackBerry. These are tools for developing founder taste:
1. The Physics-First Analysis Before any customer conversation, outline the technical inevitabilities in your space:
What's getting 10x cheaper annually? (Storage, compute, bandwidth)
What's driving adoption inflection points? (5G, AR, voice interfaces)
What behaviors do these shifts allow?
Reed Hastings saw bandwidth doubling annually and asked, "What becomes possible at 10 Mbps that's impossible at 1 Mbps?" The answer was streaming. No customer survey needed.
Practice this weekly. Pick one technical trend and extrapolate five years. Which current customer complaints become irrelevant? Which features that seem impossible become inevitable?
2. The Temporary/Permanent Decoder For every customer feedback, ask:
Is this need tied to current technical limitations?
Does this reflect unchanging human psychology?
BlackBerry users saying "I need a keyboard" = temporary (2007 touchscreen tech) BlackBerry users saying "I need to communicate efficiently" = permanent (human nature)
Run this analysis on your last 20 customer requests. 80% are temporary truths posing as permanent needs.
3. The Anti-Expertise Audit Monthly argues against your strongest belief about customers:
Write a 500-word case for why your core assumption is wrong.
Find three data points that support the contrary view.
Present it to your team with confidence.
The founder of Shopify did this with "small businesses want simple tools." His anti-argument was "Merchants will demand enterprise-level complexity as they grow." This led to Shopify Plus, which now accounts for 30% of revenue.
4. Future Customer Interview Instead of only talking to current users, interview potential customers who are not:
Why don't they use your product?
What needs to change?
What lesser option do they prefer?
Uber's key insight came from interviewing non-users who preferred driving their own cars. Their objection wasn't price—it was control. This led to features like route selection and music preferences, expanding the addressable market by 40%.
From Frameworks to Insight
These frameworks aren't the destination—they're the journey. They help you develop balance until you don't need them anymore, like training wheels. The goal isn't to run monthly audits indefinitely. It's to internalize the meta-cognitive awareness until it becomes automatic.
Think of it like learning a musical instrument. First, you follow sheet music (frameworks). Then, you understand music theory (principles). Finally, you improvise jazz (judgment). You can't skip straight to jazz, but you can't play sheet music indefinitely.
The best founders use frameworks to accelerate wisdom development, not replace it. They run assumption audits until questioning assumptions becomes instinctive. They do physics-first analyses until technological thinking becomes second nature. They practice temporary/permanent decoding until the distinction is clear.
This is how Reed Hastings developed the judgment to ignore DVD customers. He trained himself to see beyond customer feedback to technological inevitability, not through founder intuition, but through years of practiced analysis.
The Path Forward
Here's your progression roadmap:
Months 1-3: Follow the frameworks. Run weekly physics analyses. Conduct monthly assumption audits. Document every insight.
Months 4-6: Notice patterns. Which frameworks reveal the most surprises? Which assumptions are incorrect? Your judgment is developing.
Months 7-12: Trust your instincts—but verify. When your intuition says "ignore this feedback," run the analysis to confirm. Right more than wrong? You're graduating from frameworks to wisdom.
Year 2+: Frameworks become spot-checks, not crutches. You sense which customer truths are temporary. You still audit yourself quarterly—even experts need calibration.
Complete your first physics-first analysis within 24 hours. Choose one technology trend in your industry. Write 500 words on what becomes possible when it's 10x better/cheaper/faster. What customer needs disappear in this future? Those are temporary truths. Start disregarding them today.
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Thanks, Todd, for a very useful article. We often think in terms of “how might we disrupt the X market and overthrow the giants?” Your framework offers a practical way to think about defending the advantage we already have, something we often forget until it’s too late.
Thanks Todd for another very thought provoking articel :-)