My experience of participating to a startup weekend competition in Ita
Intro
A few weeks ago, I participated in a startup competition in Italy. Over a single weekend, my team had to develop a startup idea, validate it, and pitch it against other teams. In this article, I’ll share our experience and the key lessons that led us to victory.
Startup Weekend and Its Learnings
First, what exactly is a Startup Weekend competition? It’s an intense, fast-paced event that teaches you how to build a startup from scratch. The focus is on idea generation, validation, and pitch preparation—the core pillars of any successful startup. These skills are taught through a mix of talks, workshops, group activities, and networking opportunities.
The Problem
The first lesson we learned was that every great startup idea must solve a real problem. We were taught how to:
- Clearly define a problem
- Analyze its impact
- Validate its existence
A well-defined problem should stem from real-world observations—not just assumptions.
Problem Validation
Identifying a problem isn’t enough—you must validate it. This means:
- Conducting surveys (online or in-person)
- Interviewing potential users (without biasing them with your solution)
- Asking questions that focus solely on the problem
- Checking if users have tried other solutions (which indicates motivation)
This process helps confirm whether the problem is worth solving and if users would be willing to adopt your solution.
The Solution
Once the problem is validated, it’s time to design a solution. Using insights from user interviews, we refined our approach by asking:
- How does our solution benefit the user?
- How does it stand out from competitors?
Market Research
A great solution means nothing without a market. We learned to:
- Estimate the total addressable market (e.g., the entire continent)
- Narrow it down to our immediate market (e.g., national or regional)
- Identify our early adopters (e.g., tech-savvy travelers)
This helps focus efforts on the most promising customer segments.
The Pitch—Where Ideas Succeed or Fail
Since this was a competition, we had to convince judges that our idea was the best. But even outside Startup Weekend, pitching is crucial when seeking investors or customers.
Key pitch tips we followed:
- Keep slides clean (minimal text, one idea per slide)
- Use data to back claims
- Choose the best speaker on the team (someone engaging and persuasive)
- Emotion matters—make the audience want to support you
Fitravel: Our Winning Idea
Our entry, Fitravel, won first place. Here’s how we did it.
The Problem We Tackled
Active people struggle to maintain their fitness routines and diets while traveling in groups.
Validation
We created an online survey and interviewed nearly 100 people (filtering out non-exercisers). Key findings:
- Most fitness enthusiasts wanted to keep training and eating well while traveling.
- Many had traveled in groups before or were interested in trying it.
This confirmed a real demand for our solution.
Our Solution
Fitravel offers group travel packages that include:
- Gym access
- Sightseeing activities
- Comfortable accommodations
- Custom meal plans for dietary needs
Execution
Even before pitching, we took action:
- Built a landing page (with our first trip planned for September)
- Collected early sign-ups
- Prepared a 5-minute pitch covering our research, solution, and team
The judges unanimously declared Fitravel the best idea, and we won!
Next Steps
Winning was just the beginning—we’re now turning Fitravel into a real business. Our first trip launches in September, and I’ll share more updates as we grow.
As a tech founder in a non-tech company, I’ll also write about the challenges and lessons of building a startup from scratch. Stay tuned!
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