Learn What the Best Products
Got Wrong — And How to Fix It for Logistics
Opinionated, specific critiques of how great products could be better — the UX improvements, architectural refactors, and product decisions we'd make differently.
For logistics companies: Differentiating in a commoditized market while building switching costs.
Read CritiquesIndustry
Logistics
Supply chain and logistics technology competing on reliability, speed, and integration
Core Challenge
Differentiating in a commoditized market while building switching costs
Target Outcome
strong retention through deep integration and measurable reliability
What logistics teams miss when studying what we'd do differently
Supply chain and logistics technology competing on reliability, speed, and integration — compounded by differentiating in a commoditized market while building switching costs.
Learning only from success stories without understanding why good products still have flaws
No framework for structured product critique that produces actionable improvements
Cargo-culting decisions from successful products without understanding their limitations
No way to develop product taste without seeing both what works and what doesn't
What We'd Do Differently applied to logistics products
We give honest, specific critiques — not generic praise or vague suggestions
We explain exactly what we'd change and why — with the product thinking behind each decision
We use real products to develop the product taste that separates good from great
We show how the same problem was solved better elsewhere
What logistics founders gain from what we'd do differently
Sharper Product Taste
Learning to see flaws in great products develops the taste that makes your own decisions better.
Constructive Critique Framework
A structured way to evaluate any product — your own or a competitor's.
Avoid Repeated Mistakes
Learn from documented errors before you build the same anti-patterns.
Better Design Vocabulary
Specific critiques build the vocabulary for describing design decisions precisely.
The what we'd do differently process for logistics products
Define what the product is trying to do
Every critique starts with understanding the intended goal — before judging the execution.
Identify where it falls short
Find the specific moments where the product makes the user work harder than it should.
Propose the alternative
Describe the specific change — not just 'make it simpler' but exactly what simpler looks like.
Evaluate the trade-off
Acknowledge why the current design might have been chosen — and why the alternative is better.
What We'd Do Differently for Logistics
logistics companies operate within specific constraints: Supply chain and logistics technology competing on reliability, speed, and integration. Understanding what we'd do differently through this lens leads to strong retention through deep integration and measurable reliability.
Without rigorous what we'd do differently
- ×Learning only from success stories without understanding why good products still have flaws
- ×No framework for structured product critique that produces actionable improvements
- ×Cargo-culting decisions from successful products without understanding their limitations
With Greta's what we'd do differently approach
- ✓We give honest, specific critiques — not generic praise or vague suggestions
- ✓We explain exactly what we'd change and why — with the product thinking behind each decision
- ✓We use real products to develop the product taste that separates good from great
What We'd Do Differently reading list
Learn from the best.
Build for logistics companies.
Greta applies the patterns from great products to build yours — shipped in days, not months.