Generate a Startup Canvas for a new product. Combines the 9-section Product Strategy Canvas with a Business Model (Cost Structure + Revenue Streams). Designed specifically for startups and new products.
Triggers
startup canvas, new product canvas, startup strategy, startup business model
Domain Context
Startup Canvas vs Business Model Canvas vs Lean Canvas
Popular approaches like Business Model Canvas (Strategyzer) and Lean Canvas (Ash Maurya) mix strategy and business model into one artifact. The
Startup Canvas
(Paweł Huryn) separates them: 9 strategy sections from the Product Strategy Canvas + Cost Structure & Revenue Streams.
Why not Business Model Canvas?
No vision — why should your team wake up every day?
No Can't/Won't test — what stops competitors from copying you?
No trade-offs — what you choose NOT to do creates focus
No key metrics — how do you know the strategy is working?
Key Partnerships and Key Resources are rarely useful for early-stage products
Why not Lean Canvas?
Introduces redundancy: "Problem" overlaps with Market Segments (markets are defined by problems), "Solution" overlaps with Value Proposition (which by definition includes features)
No vision, no trade-offs, no relative costs
"Unfair Advantage" is too narrow — the entire strategy should be hard to copy, not just one element
Doesn't address the holistic fit of strategic choices reinforcing each other
When to use which:
Business Model Canvas
Established businesses, corporate strategy, investor materials
Lean Canvas
Quick hypothesis testing when you just need speed
Startup Canvas
New products where you need both strategic clarity AND a business model — the recommended approach
Instructions
You are a product strategist and startup advisor designing a Startup Canvas for $ARGUMENTS.
Your task is to create a comprehensive Startup Canvas that covers both the strategic choices and the business model for a new product.
Input Requirements
Product or startup idea
Target market and customer insights
Competitive landscape
Founder/team constraints and resources
Startup Canvas Template
Part 1: Product Strategy (9 Sections)
1. Vision
How can we inspire people? What are we aspiring to achieve? What values do we uphold?
Start simple. Your vision will evolve alongside the strategy.
2. Market Segments
The market is defined by the problems people have (not demographics).
Jobs to Be Done (JTBD), desired outcomes, constraints.
What will be your first customer segment? Why this one first?
3. Relative Costs
Do you optimize for low cost (like Southwest Airlines) or unique value (like Starbucks)?
Low costs don't necessarily mean low prices.
4. Value Proposition
For each market segment:
What before
Existing, problematic state
How
Features and capabilities that change the situation
What after
The benefits and outcomes
Alternatives
Your unique value vs. competitors and substitutes (consider a Value Curve)
5. Trade-offs
What will you NOT do? Trade-offs create focus and amplify value.
Especially important for startups where it's tempting to chase every opportunity.
6. Key Metrics
A few key metrics to measure if the product and strategy are working.
North Star Metric and One Metric That Matters (OMTM) for this quarter.
7. Growth
Product-Led Growth or Sales-Led Growth?
Preferred channels: Social Media, SEO, Influencers, Resellers?
8. Capabilities
What competencies and resources do you need to acquire?
What do you build vs. partner for?
9. Can't/Won't
What makes you think competitors can't or won't copy your strategy?
The entire strategy should be difficult to copy — not just one element.
Do all elements fit together and reinforce each other?
Part 2: Business Model
10. Cost Structure
Rent, hardware, licenses, technology, marketing, subscriptions, salaries.
Which are recurring? How will they scale?
11. Revenue Streams
How much money from each channel?
Pricing approach: penetration, value-based, competitive, usage-based, SaaS?
Is the revenue model scalable? What are the biggest uncertainties?
Output Process
Define the vision and aspirational impact
Identify 2–3 target market segments with JTBD
Establish cost positioning (low cost vs premium)
Develop value propositions for each segment
List explicit trade-offs
Set North Star and quarterly OMTM
Outline growth strategy and channels
Document required capabilities
Explain defensibility (Can't/Won't test)
Estimate cost structure and revenue streams
Validate strategy coherence: do all elements reinforce each other?
Surface hypotheses that must be true for success
Suggest low-effort experiments to test key assumptions
Notes
The Startup Canvas separates strategy from business model — keep them distinct but connected
Strategy should pass the Can't/Won't test: your competitors can't or won't copy the integrated set of choices
After drafting the first version, identify and start testing hypotheses
Mix and adapt approaches to suit your specific needs rather than following any canvas rigidly
Templates
Startup Canvas (PPTX)
Further Reading
Startup Canvas: Product Strategy and a Business Model for a New Product
Product Strategy Canvas
How to Design a Value Proposition Customers Can't Resist?
Business Model Canvas Examples: Google Maps, Airbnb, Uber