borodutch
@farcasteradmin.eth
everybody is creative, ideas are a dime a thousand no one wants to build, and even fewer people want to pivot when their idea doesn't work creative input is infinite, scaling productive output is a skill few posses
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D-wayΓ±e ππ
@drrrner.eth
Could be argued that similar drive could be applied to former project if you still believed in it and it would most likely pick up.
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borodutch
@farcasteradmin.eth
statistically, chances of a dead project picking up because founders still believed and put more effort into it, are miniscule your product either works on the market or no one cares about it clearly visible within two weeks of launching
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D-wayΓ±e ππ
@drrrner.eth
Hard disagree; Slack was originally a failed game called Glitch. Nobody cared. But the dev team loved the internal chat tool they built to communicate. Pinterest spent a year with almost zero traction. Took 2+ years to hit product-market fit. Notions early version failed. They shut down and rebuilt the entire thing from scratch in 2017. Look at it now. Sometimes the most important quality to have as a founder is to believe in the product itself
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