Hackathons happen almost every month, and there is always a winner. But here’s something most people don’t realize: the winner is not always the “best” participant technically.
I’ve participated in about 15 hackathons and won 12 of them. Looking back, I won’t say I was the best builder in every single one, but I approached them strategically. This write-up is based on both my wins and losses, and it covers practical things that genuinely increase your chances of winning a hackathon.
The first thing to understand is that every hackathon has a theme. Whether it’s Web2, Web3, fintech, healthtech, AI, or any other niche, there is always a direction the organizers want participants to build around. Inside that theme are usually sub-themes like using a specific API, solving a financial problem, building for healthcare, accessibility, education, and so on. Sometimes these details are released late, but they always matter.
One of the biggest mistakes participants make is building something impressive that does not align properly with the hackathon’s goals. No matter how good your product is, if it does not fit the problem statement, judges will struggle to connect with it. So the first rule is simple: read the overview properly and fully understand what the organizers actually want.
The next factor, and honestly one of the strongest winning factors, is team formation. Every hackathon I’ve won had a very strong team behind it. A good team pushes everyone beyond their limits.
A proper hackathon team is not just about having smart people. It’s about balance. You need people who can cover different parts of the product effectively. Usually, this means having a strong frontend developer, backend developer, product-minded thinker, and most importantly, a solid pitch person.
As someone who has also judged hackathons, I can confidently say that pitching can make or break a project. A lot of amazing products lose because they were poorly presented. Your pitch person should be able to explain the product clearly, confidently, and in a way that makes judges understand the value immediately. Pitching is not about shouting or overhyping a project. It’s about communicating properly. A strong team with strong pitching skills can increase your winning chances massively.
Another underrated strategy is researching the judges. Who are they? What kind of products do they work on? What problems are they interested in solving? Understanding this helps you position your solution in a way they can easily relate to.
Research plays a huge role in hackathon success. Check past winning projects, study the judging criteria, and gather as much information as possible before the event starts. Preparation gives you an advantage most teams ignore.
Then comes the build itself. Even if you do everything else correctly, a poor demo can destroy your chances. In hackathons, technical execution matters a lot. If your demo breaks during pitching, it affects confidence in the product.
Before presenting, test everything multiple times. Make sure the core features work properly and always prepare a backup plan, whether it’s a demo video, screenshots, or fallback environments. Knowing your product works smoothly gives you confidence while presenting.
Outside of winning, another important thing is networking. Some of the best opportunities from hackathons come from the people you meet. Your future co-founder, teammate, collaborator, or even employer might be in the same room. So even if you don’t win, connecting with people and confidently sharing your skills is still a huge win.
At the end of the day, hackathons are not just about prizes. They help you improve your speed, teamwork, communication, problem-solving, and execution. Keep building, keep shipping, and even if your idea feels common, add something unique that makes people remember it.
I’m rooting for every builder out there. Good luck, and don’t forget to pray for grace too.
Top comments (8)
thanks alot
You’re welcome bro!
i started last yr solo built around web3 web2 ,vibe coding won 18x out of 100+ , this would have helped a along way but thanks for making it up here much respect
18x,wow .
That's peak .
Building EduCreds a blockchain powered infrastructure for issuing tamper-proof academic credentials but for sure i have noticed two things why product has been failing. My Team composition and The product Pitching..
Surely thank you very much
Cool 😎,
Thanks for this, man. Team formation might be my problem.
Very helpful