After my last exit, I found myself drawn to coaching. I wanted to help founders avoid the struggles I’d faced while building my businesses.
But there was a problem.
Every time I introduced myself as a coach, I saw that look – “Oh, one more coach.” I was being lumped in with many others. And I didn’t like that.
In 20 years of building and selling companies, one thing I’ve learned is to build a moat.
Find a small territory you can completely own.
Then, dominate it.
So, I stopped treating coaching like a passion project and started building it like a real business. I applied the 7 monopoly-building principles that had worked for my previous ventures.
Today, I’m sharing them with you.
If you run a recruitment agency, digital agency, IT services firm, design agency, accounting practice, retail business, any professional services company, or even an e-commerce store—and feel trapped in a crowded market with thinning margins and constant competition—this edition is specifically for you.
Master these principles, make them your own, and you won’t just compete — you’ll own your space.
Let me walk you through the exact sequence I am following to build my monopoly position in my coaching practice.
Side note: You’ll read this letter in about 5 minutes, but what I’m sharing is 2 years of my journey—running in circles, wrestling with uncertainty, and slowly finding clarity. When you start applying these principles, you might feel overwhelmed or unsure. That’s normal. The founders who succeed aren’t the ones with immediate answers—they’re the ones willing to sit with the difficult questions and do the deep work. This is business building at its core.
7 Principles to Create an Unbeatable Position
I recommend starting with the first three foundational principles.
Master these first, then move to the others as your business evolves.

START HERE:
1. Distribution Trumps Product
“How will anyone even know you exist?”
A great product is worthless if nobody sees it. Distribution is how you reach customers—and great distribution beats a great product every time.
The strategy:
- Build paths to reach customers that competitors don’t have
- Invest more in how you reach people than in adding features
- Create systems where customers bring you more customers
How I applied this: I knew my coaching program meant nothing if nobody knew about it.
I focused on building my distribution channels—LinkedIn content and this newsletter. These aren’t just marketing—they’re pipelines that consistently deliver clients to my business. Both my digital course and coaching reach founders through these channels without spending a fortune on ads.
That’s the power of distribution. Clients find me, instead of me chasing them.
2. Own the Sales Process
“How do you know what your market truly wants?”
Founders who control their sales process control their destiny. Each sales conversation is market research that shapes your future.
The strategy:
- Use sales conversations to gather market intelligence
- Treat each discussion as a learning opportunity, not just a transaction
- Refine your offering based on direct customer feedback
How I applied this: I don’t hide behind automated funnels. I get involved in sales conversations because they give me invaluable market intelligence.
Each call reveals what founders truly struggle with. This helps me refine my messaging and solutions. When my messaging aligned with what founders truly needed, my conversion rates soared.
3. Dominate a Small Market First
“But isn’t a niche too limiting for growth?”
Owning 50% of a small market beats having 1% of a huge market.
The strategy:
- Choose a small market you can completely own
- Solve one core problem perfectly
- Make competitors irrelevant by design
How I applied this: I used my sales calls to find my niche. I didn’t enter the crowded “business coaching” space. Instead, I focused only on founder-CEOs who have a product but struggle with revenue and cash flow. Most of them weren’t trained in sales, pricing, or financial strategy—but those skills could make or break their company.
I solve one thing exceptionally well: how to make more money and keep it.
This focus lets me charge premium rates and work with a select few clients (giving them my best, which leads to better outcomes). So, niching down serves really well.
Once you’ve established these three foundational principles, you’ll start becoming known in your market. Your target clients will begin to see you as the go-to expert rather than just another option.
Then continue to strengthen your position with these next steps, prioritizing based on your specific challenges.
NEXT STEPS (Adapt based on your situation):
4. Build for Scale Economics
“How do you grow without hitting a ceiling?”
Create a business that gets stronger as it grows.
The strategy:
- Start small, but plan your systems for scale
- Build processes that work better as you get bigger
- Make it hard for clients to leave once they join
How I applied this: I didn’t want to trade hours for dollars forever. I started with 1:1 coaching but planned for scale from the start. My Founder’s Freedom Blueprint course creates leverage —I make money while I sleep. Each new client and course member gets value without adding proportional work for me. I productized my service, and now my business can grow beyond just my time and effort.
5. Create Proprietary Systems
“What stops competitors from copying everything you do?”
Make your approach uncopyable by building systems that competitors can’t easily replicate.
The strategy:
- Develop unique methodologies that become your signature
- Turn your expertise into simple frameworks
- Build intellectual property that only you can deliver
How I applied this: I packaged my knowledge into branded systems—Revenue Accelerator & Profit Maximizer. These programs contain exclusive tools, templates, and workflows tested over the years, and only I know exactly how and when to apply them.
That’s why clients refer others—they recognize my frameworks by name.
6. Position for Technological Dominance
“How do you stay ahead as technology and markets evolve?”
Don’t just compete on features—reimagine how the problem can be solved.
The strategy:
- Become 10x better at one specific thing
- Find a new way to approach old problems
- Start small, but build solutions that can grow
How I applied this: What makes me different is how I think about coaching. I approach problems like a founder who’s been there. I can spot cash flow issues, pricing mistakes, and team problems in minutes because I’ve lived through them.
This founder-first mindset is my “technology”—it lets me cut through theory and get straight to solutions. I see patterns others miss because I’ve experienced them firsthand.
You could even consider reinventing an old process, like Notion did for docs.
7. Think in Decades, Not Years
“How do you build something that lasts?”
Build for lasting advantage, not short-term wins.
The strategy:
- Make bold, specific predictions about the future
- Build for the next decade, not the next quarter
- Focus on timeless principles, not trends
How I applied this: My coaching business is built to last. After 20 years of building companies, I know what stands the test of time. I focus on business basics that never change: finding customers, solving real problems, and making a profit. This long-term focus will ensure that I build something that grows more valuable over time, not less.
Most assets lose value—good businesses gain it.
This Week's CEO Action Step
Creating a monopoly isn’t about beating competitors—it’s about becoming the only logical choice in your market. To start building your position:
- List what makes your company “just another option” versus “the only real choice”.
- Identify one small market segment you could dominate. (Focus on attracting new customers only from this segment)
- List the distribution channels available to you to start immediately.
- How can you tell your story so it becomes the reference point in your industry?
Remember, even after knowing the framework, it took me two years to get clear about what I am really building. Even now, I’m still evolving it. It is expected that you will not know all the answers right away, and you surely won’t find them in a sudden flash. But be patient with yourself and trust the process as you do this work. This is the best way to build a robust, high-value business —one that you’ll be proud to own.
To building monopolies,
Surabhi