As a founder, the number of projects you can truly succeed in during your lifetime is at most three or four. To be realistic, often only one.
If you've already gained some traction—market feedback, user growth, or any form of validation—then it's worth considering how to refine and perfect this. Many people think they've failed in entrepreneurship, but in reality, they are just stuck at a stage of difficulty. Giving up and breaking through are sometimes separated only by a decision.
Persistence is not stubbornness, but a choice driven by data and market signals.
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AirdropBuffet
· 20h ago
Getting stuck at a bottleneck and wanting to move forward, the most unfortunate thing is this. It’s all about the data, not just feelings.
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GasWaster69
· 20h ago
To be honest, most people haven't really figured out whether they truly have no chance or if they've just given up too early.
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potentially_notable
· 20h ago
Really, the line between persistence and giving up is too thin; one misstep can lead to going astray.
Think carefully before exiting.
As a founder, the number of projects you can truly succeed in during your lifetime is at most three or four. To be realistic, often only one.
If you've already gained some traction—market feedback, user growth, or any form of validation—then it's worth considering how to refine and perfect this. Many people think they've failed in entrepreneurship, but in reality, they are just stuck at a stage of difficulty. Giving up and breaking through are sometimes separated only by a decision.
Persistence is not stubbornness, but a choice driven by data and market signals.