Why executing even the greatest startup idea first requires sales (and beyond-superficial curiosity)

April 22, 2025  |  Startland News Staff

Lee Walter, a mentor for UMKC’s Regnier Institute for Entrepreneurship and Innovation, talks about the importance of curiosity with Sam Kulikov for the UMKC Student Venture Series podcast; courtesy image

That sexy pitch alone might not get your startup its first customer, said Lee Walter, noting that lasting success relies heavily on jumping outside the vaunted “ideation” phase to truly question a venture’s value.

Walter’s revelation — born from a sales career that stretched from selling school lockers and coffee beans to commercial espresso machines on the global market (plus a stint in investment banking) — requires a startup leader to set aside their egos and listen to their inner salesman.

“Sales is the closest thing to entrepreneurship without necessarily starting your own business,” Walter, a mentor for UMKC’s Regnier Institute for Entrepreneurship and Innovation, told Sam Kulikov, co-founder of Social Apex Media, for an ongoing UMKC Student Venture Series podcast from the Regnier Institute.

“You’re perpetually trying to figure out ‘How do I solve the problem that a customer has with the problem I’m representing?'” Walter continued.

The duo’s conversation highlighted the critical nature of staying curious.

“Alongside passion, curiosity tends to be one of the signifying elements of a great entrepreneur. That unending, curious mentality,” said Kulikov.

For Walter, the questions started early, he said, recalling an experience as a teenager selling high-end chocolate from a shop on the Country Club Plaza in Kansas City. On one busy day over a Valentine’s weekend, Walter sold more than $7,000 in chocolate — setting a store record for single day sales, and prompting his bosses to ask him how he did it.

“I just kept asking, ‘Do you have everything you need?'” Walter said he answered. “Even to this day, I’m like ‘wow.'”

Click here to watch more videos in this podcast series.

As his business knowledge grew deeper throughout his career, Walter realized the scope of an entrepreneur’s questioning needed to get equally complex to grow business beyond a one-off.

“Really focus down to say ‘What problem does this solve? And who’s the audience you want to reach?’” he said. “When you’re starting a business, lots of people tend to fall in love with the ideas, but rubber meets the road at execution.”

And execution means identifying your first customer, then the second, Walter told Kulikov, noting along the way an entrepreneur must identify customers’ shared traits and needs. 

“Then you have to get to 10,” he said of the customer acquisition process. “And then you have to go back — and this is the part that’s really hard — and say ‘Why did you buy this?'”

The questions really never end, Walter said, as companies determine a product’s fit.

“Somebody buying something as a favor is nice, but it doesn’t say you have a business,” he said. “I’m a firm believer that if I can solve your problem, you’ll pay me the value. But if our transactional relationship relies on a personal relationship, then I have to spend all my time making sure you’re not upset. And that’s not a good foundation for a business relationship.”

Watch the full podcast below, including Walter and Kulikov’s discussion on getting through the superficial levels of curiosity; finding a safe place to fail; grappling with the fluidity of a business’ identity; and how to get a 20-minute meeting with anyone in Kansas City.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

2025 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Kansas City seeks leaders for Smart City board

    By Tommy Felts | May 28, 2015

    The City of Kansas City, Mo., is now seeking nominations to lead the city’s smart city efforts. City leaders hope to attract citizens with experience in smart city technologies to help advise the City of Fountain’s coming Cisco Smart City project, in addition to its other smart city efforts. The newly authorized “Smart City Advisory…

    RECAP: 1 Million Cups focuses on time with Mixtape, Flowh

    By Tommy Felts | May 27, 2015

    There was a theme at today’s 1 Million Cups KC, and it was time. Two startups presented their businesses, both at different stages, and both in different industries, but both dealing with time — how we remember it and how we manage it. Mixtape founder Joel Johnson was first to present his firm, which created…

    Katie Boody Carrie Markel Lean Lab

    Lean Lab eyes $25K in national pitch contest

    By Tommy Felts | May 27, 2015

    The Lean Lab, a Kansas City-based education innovation incubator, is hoping to strike gold in a national pitch competition in California. The organization on Wednesday will be pitching its model in the Teach For America Social Innovation Awards, an annual competition in which the Lean Lab hopes to snag a $25,000 prize. Lean Lab is the…

    6 ways to be a startup community hero (for non-entrepreneurs)

    By Tommy Felts | May 27, 2015

    Melissa Roberts, marketing director of the Enterprise Center of Johnson County, shares how those interested in helping the startup community can effectively engage entrepreneurs.  In my work at an entrepreneurial service non-profit in Kansas City, I get to meet many passionate, community-minded people each day. Often, those people have no connection to our startup community, other than…