Hey,
In this issue, let's talk about your product: who are you building for, and do you have feature bloat?
Also:
📸 - Spicy take on VC-backed companies
📊 - Startup M&A in H1 2025
🔎 - Resources for founders
Welcome to issue 132.
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You get back to building the rocket ship.
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Social Snapshot
💭 The most natural capital structure by Will Manidis on X.
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Data Corner
Startup M&A in H1 2025
According to data from Crunchbase, startup M&A is heating up fast. Over $100B in disclosed acquisition value changed hands in H1 2025, up 155% from the same period last year. One-third of that came from Google’s $32B deal for cybersecurity unicorn Wiz, but it wasn’t the only headline-maker. ServiceNow picked up Moveworks for $2.85B, Xero grabbed Melio for $2.5B, and OpenAI dropped $6.5B on AI hardware startup Io (co-founded by Jony Ive).
Deal count stayed flat in the mid-400s, but the tone’s shifted. AI-driven bidding wars (like the Windsurf saga) hint at a more frenzied market. Still, most spend hasn’t gone to AI startups, just ~$15B of it. The rest? A mix of enterprise software, healthcare, and under-the-radar buys from names like Stripe, Snap, and Zscaler.
Four years post-2021 boom, the M&A pipeline is full, and buyers are circling. Exciting times.
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Your Most Profitable Features Are the Ones You Forgot About
Founders don’t set out to bloat their products. It happens slowly, one justifiable decision at a time. A customer asks for something “minor.” A competitor launches a feature that feels adjacent. A team member makes a case for a configurable setting that seems harmless. And over time, the product becomes a warehouse of edge cases and half-solutions, classic feature bloat. Each one has a story, but none with measurable value.
What makes it dangerous is that bloat rarely feels like a problem. Most features don’t cause bugs. They don’t crash systems. They just sit there, quietly eroding clarity, slowing adoption, and giving support teams more things to explain. Because they don’t scream for attention, they’re treated as neutral. But that’s the lie: features are never neutral. They either drive growth or they distract from it.
80% of features in the average software product are rarely or never used, according to Pendo’s analysis. That stat floats around because it’s shocking, but what’s more damning is what it implies: founders routinely overestimate what matters to their customers. The Nielsen Norman Group quantified the effect. Interfaces cluttered with options and complexity can reduce conversion rates by 20–40%. Which means that every additional feature, however harmless it seems, carries a weight on onboarding, comprehension, and purchase intent.
So why do founders keep shipping them?
It isn’t strategy. It’s psychology. Founders become attached to their features because they remember what it took to build them. The pitch that got buy-in. The late nights spent debugging. The emotional residue of sunk cost and pride. A feature that represents weeks of effort and internal friction is hard to kill, especially if you once believed it was essential.
That belief doesn’t vanish when usage data says otherwise. Edrizio De La Cruz, founder of Arcus (formerly Regalii), told me on this episode of the Fundraising Demystified podcast how, after Demo Day at Y Combinator, they realized no one wanted the product they’d built. They had to kill it completely, and not just once. It took four or five pivots to land on something that customers truly valued. That kind of reset isn’t just a product decision. It’s an identity shift. But it’s also what separated them from every other team still clinging to features that weren’t working.
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Sometimes the attachment is more subtle. It comes from fear. Removing a feature feels risky, like backpedaling. What if someone complains? What if a big account gets annoyed? So you rationalize. You keep it “just in case.” You frame it as optional, or niche, or non-disruptive. And slowly, your product stops being built for your best-fit customers and starts becoming a graveyard of good intentions.
This becomes especially costly when you’re raising capital or preparing for a sale. Investors don’t reward optionality; they reward traction, velocity, and clarity of value. Feature bloat reads as indecision. A cluttered onboarding flow signals operational friction. A cluttered onboarding flow signals operational friction. And a high support load tied to rarely-used features suggests you’re not prioritizing your time where it matters. Every extra feature dilutes the core story, and in a pitch deck or diligence session, confusion is fatal.
There’s a better way to approach this, and it doesn’t require a roadmap overhaul or a dramatic changelog post. You don’t need to ask permission. You just need to treat pruning as a normal part of building.
Start with your data. Look for features with either low usage or high support overhead. One or the other is enough to warrant scrutiny. Then, remove quietly. Don’t announce it. Don’t create a feedback form. If it wasn’t helping most users, it won’t be missed by most users.
Give it two weeks. Track who complains. Then analyze who they are. Are they on your current pricing plans? Are they high-LTV or high-retention cohorts? If yes, reconsider. If no, move on.
We’ve seen this play out in all kinds of teams. When I spoke to Brady Nolan, co-founder of Till (now Flex), he told me here they made what he called “a ton of mistakes,” including building product features for the wrong reasons, mainly to chase metrics that looked good in a fundraise deck. They ended up making product decisions that weren’t grounded in what users needed, and it came back to bite them. The fix wasn’t minor. They had to rebuild the entire way the business operated just to realign the team and rebuild trust across functions. That kind of overhaul doesn’t happen unless your product has become something you can’t defend with a straight face. And it starts, almost always, with shipping things that feel strategic but aren't.
I’ve heard the same pattern from other founders, too. JC Glancy, co-founder of ZenBusiness, told me in this episode that they built a bunch of things early on that sounded smart on paper, like a compliance-checking app for existing businesses and a white-labeled formation workflow for law firms. But none of it worked. Nobody wanted it, and trying to sell it nearly killed their momentum. Eventually, JC scrapped the whole approach and spun up a basic landing page targeting the same market as LegalZoom. It took an afternoon to build, and it immediately started generating calls. That shift toward a simpler, clearer offering is what gave them traction. All the “bonus” complexity they thought would differentiate them had just made it harder for customers to say yes.
These aren’t isolated cases; they’re symptoms of a pattern: when products get simpler, the business tends to work better. Not because simplicity is trendy, but because it removes decision friction, accelerates activation, and forces teams to focus on what actually moves the needle.
Every feature has a carrying cost. Development time. QA cycles. Support tickets. Maintenance load. Messaging complexity. If it’s not earning that cost back in revenue, retention, or user success, it’s feature bloat dressed up as progress, and it’s debt.
And unlike tech debt, product debt is harder to spot. There’s no red flag. No failure alert. Just a gradual flattening of growth curves and a vague sense that things aren’t clicking like they used to.
You can’t afford that kind of drag, not when speed, clarity, and focus are the leverage points that drive valuation and deal outcomes. Investors bet on momentum, not ambition.
So if a feature isn’t pulling its weight, cut it. Not to simplify. Not to make the UI cleaner. But to make room for the things that actually compound.
You’re not building a showcase. You’re building a machine. Strip it down until every moving part earns its place.
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Fundraising Resources
💸 - Access working capital fast - Explore options for free
😍 - Free list of AI Recommended VCs - Apply for free
👨💻 - Free fundraising coaching session - Schedule 15 minutes with us
📝 - Playbook for Negotiating Term Sheets - Download it Here
💽 - Playbook for Setting Up and Sharing Your Data Room - Download it Here
✉️ - Playbook for Sending Investing Updates - Download it Here
📞 - Guide to Nailing Your First Calls With Investors - Download it Here
📆 - Your 12-month Fundraising Plan- Download it Here
💫 - Pitch deck design services for founders by VCs - Decko
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Let's stay in touch:
- Written by Jason Kirby - https://www.linkedin.com/in/jasonrkirby
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