ReadySetLaunch

Case study · Failure database

Zencoder

Failure Technology & Software Primary gap · Problem Clarity
Problem Clarity
Zencoder launched in 2010 targeting video encoding, a process that consumed hours and required expensive server infrastructure that most startups couldn't afford. ​​‌‌‌‌‌‌‌​‌‌​​‌​​​​​​‌‌​‌‌‌​​​‌‌Media companies and developers experienced the sharpest pain—they needed to deliver video across multiple devices and formats, but encoding bottlenecks delayed content publishing by hours or days. The problem was measurably acute: encoding a single video could take 4-8 hours on standard hardware, directly impacting time-to-market for video products. Existing alternatives were limited and unappealing. Companies either built custom encoding infrastructure (capital-intensive and technically demanding), used desktop software like FFmpeg (requiring manual processing), or relied on expensive enterprise solutions designed for broadcasters. However, Zencoder's founders missed a critical warning sign: the market was already shifting toward cloud-native solutions and open-source tools were rapidly improving. They also underestimated how quickly larger platforms like Amazon and Google would enter the space with integrated, cheaper offerings. By the time competitors offered encoding as a commodity service bundled with broader cloud infrastructure, Zencoder's standalone positioning became increasingly vulnerable, ultimately leading to its acquisition by Brightcove in 2012.

Source: https://www.kaggle.com/datasets/dagloxkankwanda/startup-failures

Don't repeat the pattern

ReadySetLaunch's Launch Control walks you through thirteen structured questions across the same pillars this case study failed on. You earn your readiness. You don't get told you're ready.

Pressure-test your idea