Demo · test idea — Babelio is an exploratory concept, not a real product.
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Babelio Playbook Cover
2026-05-16
Playbook · eight lessons

Launch your startup. Babelio, eight lessons.

A self-paced playbook that turns the Babelio research dossier — market, audience, product, money, tech, growth, legal, AI — into eight short lessons. Each lesson explains one universal pattern in startup-craft, then applies it directly to a system-wide real-time AI dubbing app for desktop.

Lessons
08 self-paced
Reading
~2 hours
Format
read + checklist
Outcome
a launch plan

Eight lessons, in order.

Each segment is one lesson. Read them sequentially the first time — the order mirrors how a founder makes decisions: market first, audience second, product third, money fourth, then the operational stack.

What each lesson actually teaches.

01.
Lesson 01 · Market

How to read the three rings.

14 minreading
summary

TAM / SAM / SOM, competitors as validation, gaps as wedges.

You learn to size a market three ways, read a 2×2 positioning map, and tell the difference between a crowded category and an empty quadrant. Babelio's empty quadrant — system-wide voice dubbing for consumers — sits in the upper-right of that map.
02.
Lesson 02 · Audience

ICP, JTBD, the Mom Test.

14 minreading
summary

One wedge persona, three jobs-to-be-done, ten behaviour-anchored questions.

Audiences are federations. You pick a wedge: for Babelio, the remote engineer on a Tokyo standup. You learn to phrase JTBDs as forces of progress and run an interview script that surfaces real pain instead of polite compliments.
03.
Lesson 03 · Product

MVP as the smallest test of the job.

16 minreading
summary

North Star, scope discipline, latency-as-the-product.

An MVP is the smallest artefact that lets one user complete the job-to-be-done. You pick a North Star (Babelio: minutes translated per active user per week), draw a tight IN/OUT line, and learn why an 800 ms latency budget is itself a product decision.
04.
Lesson 04 · Money

Unit economics without the hand-waving.

16 minreading
summary

Freemium, LTV/CAC, payback, when to raise.

Pricing is a hypothesis, not a fact. You build a unit-economics sheet from STT + MT + TTS costs, learn why a $9.99 tier with median-user maths beats a flat $20, and find the line below which you should not take outside money.
05.
Lesson 05 · Tech

Boring tech and a latency budget.

15 minreading
summary

Tauri over Electron, streaming everywhere, scale-path by inflection point.

You learn to make stack choices against a budget instead of a hype curve. The 800 ms speech-to-speech budget dictates Tauri, Rust audio code, streaming STT/MT/TTS, and an inflection point where self-hosted Whisper crosses Deepgram on cost.
06.
Lesson 06 · Growth

Beachhead first, expansion later.

16 minreading
summary

PLG + community, top-5 channels, viral loops that compound.

A consumer product with a visible wow-moment wins on PLG + community, not sales. You pick a beachhead (reactor streamers), rank channels by leverage, and design loops — watermark, creator demos, voluntary data — that compound instead of leak.
07.
Lesson 07 · Legal & Ops

The boring stuff that kills startups.

14 minreading
summary

Entity, payments, contracts, compliance — staged by MRR.

Legal is a function of stage. You learn why Delaware C-Corp via Stripe Atlas fits a global consumer SaaS, why a Merchant-of-Record beats Stripe-direct until $10K MRR, and which compliance flags (EU AI Act, voice cloning) require a lawyer before the first paying user.
08.
Lesson 08 · AI Thesis

AI as the foundation, not the feature.

16 minreading
summary

Why-AI, data flywheel, model strategy, honest moat read.

If your product can exist without AI, you have a feature, not a thesis. You write a one-paragraph AI thesis, design a flywheel that compounds with usage, route models cheap-to-smart, and learn that the moat is rarely the model.

How to read this playbook.

Do
  • Read in order on the first pass — each lesson assumes the previous one.
  • Open `research/<topic>.md` alongside the matching lesson; lessons are commentary, research is data.
  • Do the checklist before moving on — they are the artefacts that move you forward.
  • Re-read one lesson per week as you hit that decision in real life.
Don't
  • Skip to "Money" because it sounds urgent — pricing is downstream of audience.
  • Treat the "in your startup" panels as final answers; they are the starting numbers.
  • Try to optimise all eight axes at once. Pick one per week.
  • Wait for the playbook to make decisions for you — it sharpens questions, not answers.
playbook mantra

«A prototype is a question. A playbook is a sequence of better questions.»

— begin with Lesson 01 · Market
Start · Lesson 01

Market: how to read the rings.