Startup

Most startups don't fail because the idea was bad. They fail because:

Spending a year building a "perfect" product before ever talking to a customer.

Paul Graham argues that the best way to get startup ideas is to stop trying to think of them. Instead: StartUp

We’ve all been there: waking up at 3 AM with an idea so good you’re already planning the IPO. But as Derek Sivers famously said, "Ideas are multipliers; they aren’t worth anything without execution".

Forgetting that real growth comes from customer care, not just burning VC cash on marketing. Most startups don't fail because the idea was bad

Building a startup is often portrayed as a series of high-stakes "Eureka!" moments, but experienced founders know it is usually a game of iteration and resilience. Here are three post options tailored for different vibes—whether you want to share a hard truth, a practical tip, or a bit of inspiration. Option 1: The "Hard Truth" Post

Building a solution for a pain point that doesn't actually exist in the market. Instead: We’ve all been there: waking up at

Best for LinkedIn or Medium to build authority and spark debate.