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The Smart Copycat – How Great Businesses Borrow Better

by Sebastian Murphy
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Startups love to pretend they are reinventing the wheel. But behind every “revolutionary” product is a trail of borrowed ideas, remixed features, and stolen UX flows. That is not a bug. It is the blueprint.

The best companies are not pure originals. They are strategic copycats. The difference is in what they copy, why they copy it, and how they turn it into something distinct.

“Mediocre artists borrow. Great artists steal.”
– Pablo Picasso
(Often quoted by founders just before launching a redesigned onboarding flow.)


The Art of Ethical Stealing

Smart copycats do not clone. They deconstruct, they reverse-engineer what works, strip out what does not, and inject their own context.

They know the goal is not to impress other builders. It is to deliver something familiar enough to feel usable and specific enough to feel special.


ideas, probably copied by a copycat on a board

Tip: How to Borrow Like a Pro

  1. Study winners in other verticals
    Take onboarding from Duolingo. Pricing models from Notion. Retention hooks from Peloton. Copy from whoever writes Stripe’s error messages.
  2. Copy intent, not interface
    Don’t mimic what a feature looks like. Ask why it exists, what job it does, and how your audience would respond to it.
  3. Localize the pattern
    What works in fintech may flop in edtech. Adapt the behavior, not just the button layout.
  4. Document what you borrow
    Internalize where your ideas came from. Otherwise, your team starts thinking you invented breadcrumbs.

Table: Amateur Copycat vs. Strategic Stealer

BehaviorAmateur CopycatStrategic Stealer
Chooses what is shinyPicks whatever got upvotedPicks what aligns with user needs
Blindly copies UIChanges logos and colorsReimagines flow and use case
Ignores contextSteals from direct competitorsSteals from adjacent categories
Tries to hide inspirationPretends it is all originalCredits and improves

FAQ

Q: Isn’t copying lazy?
A: Lazy is copying without understanding. Smart borrowing requires analysis, restraint, and taste. It is the startup version of jazz.

Q: What if we get called out for being a clone?
A: Then you did not differentiate enough. Copy the bones, not the skin. Build something that evolves the idea, not just mimics it.


An Open Question

If a customer saw your product next to the one you borrowed from, would they say “same thing” or “same lineage”?

Would they see duplication or iteration?


The startup ecosystem is one giant open-source syllabus. Everything is out there. What separates the hacks from the builders is curation, application, and originality on the second draft.

Steal better. Then make it yours.

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