The Art of Doing More with Less

Execution isn’t just about moving fast; it’s about moving sustainably. Here is how you can execute with a frugal mindset, backed by lessons from those who did it right.

1. Build for the “Bottom of the Pyramid,” Not the Boardroom

Frugal execution begins with stripping away the “nice-to-haves.” Many startups fail because they over-engineer products for a consumer that doesn’t exist.

The Example: Aravind Eye Care. They revolutionized cataract surgery not by using cheaper tools, but by re-engineering the process. By adopting an assembly-line model, they reduced costs to a fraction of global standards while maintaining higher success rates.

The Learning: Don’t just look for a cheaper way to build a feature; ask if the feature needs to exist at all. Execution is as much about what you stop doing as what you start.

2. Unit Economics are the Only “North Star”

A frugal startup doesn’t wait for “Series B” to figure out how to make money. Execution means refining your unit economics from Day 1. If you can’t make a profit on one transaction, you won’t make it on a million.

The Example: D-Mart (Avenue Supermarts). While e-commerce burned billions on customer acquisition, D-Mart executed a frugal, “land-owning” model with a sharp focus on inventory turnover and zero debt. They didn’t chase “eyeballs”; they chased margins.

The Learning: If your business model requires ₹50 crores in the bank to “maybe” work, it’s not an innovation—it’s a dependency. Execute until your unit economics smile at you.

3. Hire “Thinkers,” Not “Cheerleaders”

When capital is tight, your biggest asset is human ingenuity. Frugal execution requires a team that can wear multiple hats and solve problems without throwing money at them.

The Example: Zoho. Sridhar Vembu built a global SaaS giant by hiring talent from small towns and training them in-house (Zoho Schools), rather than fighting the “salary wars” of Bangalore.

The Learning: Instead of hiring 10 expensive specialists, find 4 high-quality generalists who share your “waste-not” DNA. Culture is your most effective cost-saving tool.

4. Treat Time as Your Second Currency

When you don’t have dollars, you have hours. Frugal startups execute by shortening the feedback loop between building and selling.

The Example: MittiCool. Mansukhbhai Prajapati created a clay refrigerator that requires no electricity. He didn’t wait for a lab; he iterated in his workshop based on direct feedback from villagers who needed to keep milk fresh.

The Learning: Get your MVP (Minimum Viable Product) into the hands of paying customers immediately. Paying customers are the best (and cheapest) source of validation and funding.

The Malpani Mantra for Execution:

1. KISS: Keep It Simple, Stupid.

2. Focus: Own a niche before you try to own the world.

3. Bootstrap Mentality: Even if you have funding, spend it like it’s your last rupee.

Execution is the bridge between a “great idea” and a “great business.” In India, the founders who win aren’t those who raise the most, but those who use what they have the best.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top