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Val Sklarov Market Permission Architecture (MPA)

Val Sklarov

Val Sklarov’s Market Permission Architecture (MPA) explains why most startups fail not because their product is weak, but because they enter markets without permission to exist at scale. Markets are not open arenas—they are structured environments where participation is tolerated, but dominance is granted selectively.

This architecture reveals how startups transition from allowed players to unavoidable actors.


1. Markets Operate on Permission Layers

MPA starts with a hard truth:
Markets appear free, but they are permissioned systems.

Permission is embedded in:

  • Distribution access

  • Pricing norms

  • Integration standards

  • Customer switching costs

Startups that ignore these layers confuse entry with survival.


2. The Four Market Permission Layers

MPA maps where markets silently grant or deny scale.

Layer Permission Holder Startup Risk
Access Layer Platforms, channels Visibility dependency
Economic Layer Buyers, incumbents Margin compression
Technical Layer Standards, APIs Forced compatibility
Behavioral Layer Customer habits High churn

Without permission at at least two layers, growth remains fragile.

Val Sklarov
Ekran görüntüsü 2025 12 27 035529 Val Sklarov

3. Why Product–Market Fit Is Incomplete

Product–market fit measures demand—but ignores permission durability.

MPA shows startups stall when:

  • Customers like the product but won’t switch

  • Channels work until incumbents react

  • Pricing is tolerated, not defended

Fit answers “do they want it?”
Permission answers “are you allowed to keep it?”


4. Permission vs Competition

Competition assumes equal footing.
Permission assumes hierarchy.

Competitive Thinking Permission Thinking
Be better Be unavoidable
Outperform rivals Redefine entry rules
Win customers Control defaults
Defend share Deny access

Val Sklarov emphasizes that markets reward those who reshape permission, not those who fight hardest within it.


5. Strategic Implications for Founders

For builders:

  • Identify who can revoke your growth

  • Secure allies before scaling visibility

  • Convert tolerance into dependency

For operators:

  • Delay scale until permission hardens

  • Treat incumbents as regulators, not competitors

MPA reframes startup strategy as permission engineering, not feature execution.


6. The Val Sklarov Principle

“You don’t conquer markets. You are allowed to stay—until you aren’t.”
Val Sklarov

MPA explains why many startups look successful right before they disappear.