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Jared
306 posts

Jared
@jared_maker
Developer @versilyhq | DM to share your story.
New York, USA Entrou em Şubat 2026
425 Seguindo508 Seguidores

@thejustinwelsh The unreasonable choice is usually where the story actually starts.
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@htmleverything The only plan that matters is the one that survives first contact with real users.
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The fastest way to never ship anything is to think through every possible reason it could fail.
Every edge case.
Every scaling issue.
Every “what if this breaks?”
Every path that could kill the project.
At some point, preparation turns into avoidance.
You need enough planning to avoid being reckless, but not so much that you convince yourself the idea is impossible before you even start.
Building with a small team and limited budget requires a bit of “ignorance is bliss.”
Not because you should ignore reality.
But because you need the confidence to take the first step knowing:
You will miss things.
You will make mistakes.
You will ship imperfectly.
You will have to adapt.
That’s the job.
Perfect plans don’t build products.
Teams that can learn, adjust, and keep moving do.
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Most people build routines,
That only work on good days.
That’s not a system.
That’s a mood.
Build a Minimal Viable Rhythm:
• Choose actions that survive low energy
• Make the starting point small
• Reduce friction aggressively
• Keep the rhythm even when imperfect
• Focus on return speed, not perfection
What survives hard days is your real system.
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@jonbrosio Yes. The founders who collapse them into one loop are the ones who compound fastest
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@Oliver_Clingain Most marketing problems are positioning problems in disguise...
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Most founders market like they’re giving a presentation.
Great marketers market like they’re starting a conversation.
Stop sounding corporate.
Talk like a real human:
• use simple words
• tell specific stories
• show real outcomes
• repeat important ideas often
People connect with people,
not polished jargon.
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@Layton_Gott Distribution without a point of view is just noise with a posting schedule.
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“Distribution is everything”
True...
It’s also useless advice.
Nobody tells you what it actually looks like.
For a founder, distribution is:
→ posting until people know what you believe
→ saying something specific enough to attract the right users
→ turning product lessons into content
→ turning replies into conversations
→ turning conversations into customers
→ staying visible long enough that trust compounds
“Build a great product” is not enough.
But “just get distribution” is not advice either.
Real distribution is learning how attention turns into trust.
Then trust turns into users.
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@soloceoai One person who actually gets it is worth more than a hundred followers who don't...
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Nobody around you understands why you're doing this.
Your partner is patient. Your friends are polite.
But none of them know what it's like to refresh Stripe and see nothing.
Find one builder. Just one. Tell them where you're stuck this week.
The isolation is the silent killer. Not the workload.
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AI news cycle is relentless right now.
new model drops. new benchmark. new framework. repeat.
most founders are consuming it all and shipping none of it.
pick one thing the new tooling actually unlocks for your specific users. build that. ignore the rest for 30 days.
what's the one AI capability you're actually integrating right now vs. just bookmarking?
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@laurencebuilds Luck is just what compounding looks like to people who stopped before it kicked in...
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@buildwtim Yes. Building in public only works when your audience has the problem you're solving
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Everyone wants the 10x productivity AI promises.
Nobody wants to:
- Build the prompt library from scratch
- Set up the workflows
- Hire a developer to fix what AI breaks
- Schedule recovery days for the fried brain
- Accept that "medium good" becomes the new standard
You don't want productivity.
You want a magic button.
Magic doesn't exist.
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One of the hardest product decisions is removing something people already have.
Adding features feels generous. Removing features feels rude.
But every mediocre feature becomes a tax on the whole product: support, bugs, docs, UI, mental load.
A smaller product that does the important thing really well usually beats the bloated one.
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Can’t code? Learn the basics.
No network? Start building one.
No investors? Build anyway.
Too many people use these excuses to never start. You don’t need to know everything on day one. You just need to be willing to learn, adapt, and keep building.
I’m a non-technical founder and still finding a way to make it work.
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AI does already and will shift so many things
But all that AI is shifting is simple processes and almost trivial tasks, automating things that didn't require lots of thinking and planning
The top things and processes are still hard to do
Those will be rewarded even better
These days you cant call yourself junior anymore if you know how to do CRUD apps
Vibecoders who dont want to learn the most basic stuff before producing apps are way below that, just saying.
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