The End of an Era
Three years ago, I started working on Froots, and today Iâm officially announcing its end.
I stopped working on the project two months ago, though itâs been much longer since I last spoke about it publicly. I absolutely love Froots: the juice brand, the IP, and the people who have supported us.
Froots has been in a critical state for a while. Even though I acquired 100% of the company back in November with a plan to revive it, alas, itâs time to pull the plug.
This probably wonât come as a shock to those whoâve been keeping up, as the team has been rather inactive over the past eight months. Still, I felt people deserved some closure, and to be frank, so did I. I also want to use this as an opportunity to share my experience and potentially help future founders and creators.
We did a lot of really cool things with Froots. One of the highlights was supplying free juice to every major NFT NYC 2024 event and seeing peopleâs reactions to our product. That was incredibly fun, and the support was overwhelming.
I believe that with the right leadership, Froots could perform extremely well. The IP slaps and all the people who tried the juices absolutely loved it. But Iâve come to the conclusion that, for numerous reasons, it wonât thrive under my leadership, at least for now. I would love to see Froots do well with or without me...and I really hope to one day be in a position to bring back Froots, whether as the IP or the juice brand, but realistically, thatâs unlikely.
I could list all the reasons that led us here, but Iâd rather take accountability for the things I did and didnât do. In hindsight, I didnât have enough experience to start or run a project like this at the time. We didnât plan enough, and my lack of judgment in people led me to trust those I shouldnât have. Thatâs on me.
I made a lot of promises to the community, things I wholeheartedly believed would happen, but sadly, I wasnât able to deliver on them.
I apologize for letting a lot of people down.
I donât claim to have it all figured out (otherwise, we wouldnât be here), but if youâre considering launching a project, I hope you can learn a thing or two from the next few paragraphs.
The Biggest Mistakes We Made
The biggest mistake we made was trying to please everyone. This led us to launch a game called The Arena, which cost us a lot to develop and also required $4K per week in prizes...for 24 weeks straight. That totaled around 3,000 SOL in prizes (SOL was much lower back then). The community loved it at first, but over time, it became "normal," and that wasnât enough anymore. We also launched a staking platform, even though we had initially told ourselves weâd never do it, but we caved.
I believe a lot of projects, including top ones, are suffering from the decisions they made post-mint to appease holders. The pressure to get everything right, to please everyone -as dumb as it sounds- gets to you. This might be good for short-term price action, but long term, itâs extremely -EV. People forget about those things, and youâre left with an expensive feature nobody really cares about.
We learned that the hard way.
If it wasnât obvious, Iâve always truly cared about Froots and our holders, which is why I used to write four-page essays updating the community. Itâs also why Iâm really sad to be making this post today. I said this a while ago, and itâs still true:
"It hurts seeing people leave. It hurts seeing the FP go down. It hurts seeing people who believed in us, believed in me, be disappointed. It hurts because I care, even though some days, I wish I didnât care as much."
The trap of building a company in public with a community is that, as I mentioned, you end up letting the noise get to you. That leads to poor decisions because you want to please people. The key is to manage expectations, something I personally struggled with.
This space moves fast, and if you donât constantly give people something to âeat,â they move on. Web3 communities are, by design, insatiable. Thereâs a constant inflow of new buyers who didnât benefit from past rewards (e.g., OG BAYC/DeGods holders got tons of airdrops, but new buyers didnâtâso you always need to find something new).
I had a talk with the Clayno team a while back, and this is what they told me:
"What weâre building takes time. We could stay quiet, heads down, but in Web3, youâre dealing with a younger crowd. They run on hype. We figured the best way to combat that is to focus on attention and throw smoke screens. It takes us 2-4 months to push out updatesâpeople wonât wait more than a week. Utilize the community in simple, efficient ways."
Thatâs definitely one way to approach the issue.
You need to keep the community updated, but to manage expectations, donât reveal everything. Find your balance.
For Future Founders
You can easily raise money in Web3 if youâre a decent marketer and understand the industry. But if youâre planning to do so, plan EVERYTHING in advance and stick to your vision. Of course, things wonât always go as planned, but donât go in blind.
Thereâs also a fine line between listening to community feedback and letting them dictate your projectâs direction. Listen and observe, but also trust yourself. People will always think they know better, but most of the times they donât.
Surround yourself with the right people. Donât be afraid to hire and delegate. Donât be afraid to take risks, if you donât try, nothing happens. If you do, maybe nothing happens⊠but maybe it changes everything for you.
Be consistent. This is especially true in Web3. If youâre building in public, you HAVE to stay consistent, particularly with content.
One more thing: If you create something in public, people will criticize every single decision you make. Some will spread negative stuff about you, which may or may not be true, and you may even receive threats for things you didnât do. (In Frootsâ early days, someone doxxed me as the FP dropped and even leaked my girlfriendâs personal info, which is INSANE.)
Nobody is in your shoes. Stay true to yourself, and donât let the toxicity affect your mental health. Youâre the only one who knows what you did, didnât do, or intend to do.
That said, always take accountability, nobody is perfect. I used to be frustrated that influencers, projects, or even Solana itself (lmao) wouldnât acknowledge Froots, even though we were doing something unique. But then I realized I was just bitter: if I wanted them to notice us, I needed to work harder.
The Industryâs Hypocrisy
Small rant but I've had this on my mind for a while and this isn't just about me. I find it unfair that this industry constantly shits on people who arenât bad actors, people who stick around and genuinely try new things...while simultaneously handing more money to bad actors and forgetting about them within a few days.
Shoutout to those who truly try/tried their best and are/were passionate about what they built, yet got dragged for engagement (e.g., @frankdegods ). Most of the time, the picture people paint is far from the truth.
Donât be a dick to people who show up with good intentionsâthereâs only so much they can take. If we weed out all the good actors for engagement, weâll be left with the scum of the earthâand thatâll be our fault.
Donât let others dictate your opinions. Itâs easy to believe everything you read online, but there are always multiple sides to every story.
While we get rugged daily, paradoxically, this industry doesnât tolerate failure. People are quick to label failed projects as rugs. Not everyone is going to succeedâthatâs a fact. Most people will fail.
But if youâre reading this: Shoot your shot. Take a chance. No dream is too wild or too stupid. Just do it with integrity.
Whatâs Next for Me
While itâs really hard for me to let Froots go, this is certainly not the end of Avast. Iâve learned a lot from Froots, and Iâve met some incredible people, both online and IRL at conferences like NFT NYC. This industry is now a major part of my life so I will 100% be around.
Thank you to all the people who supported us, or me and as always, if you have any questions, ask away.
Buying and BURNING a @frootsnft for each client we close and sale we make.
Sorry @0xAvast
but also, congrats - 72 bottles (12 cases) to the first client.
Byyeeeeee #534
Looking for ambassador/content creators for Froots!
We just produced another batch, if you're down to shoot content or rep the brand hit me up! đ«Ą
I might have some extra bottles for mfs who DM'd me back in april, so shoot me a DM and I'll see what we can do.
Not afraid to say it, Iâve been slacking and struggling with Froots a lot lately.
But Iâve seen peopleâs reaction to the product, I know our juices are a hit, which is why I havenât given up.
If youâre based in the US, you like the products and want to join the team to help us scale, please hit me up.
Long term partnerships only.
Looking for someone who can be the face of Froots in the US + on Tiktok/Insta, help us run ops, etcâŠ
Experience in content creation required
Experience in the F&B industry is not needed
DM me if youâre serious/if you need more info
I was very critical about #nft projects these late days, and I still am... but man, I can't do it to myself... Snagged my new pfp from the floor... Let it be there for some time... @frootsnft
đđ„đHuge shout out to @0xAvast and the @frootsnft team . Iâm still enjoying the box you gave me at the yacht party in NYđœ. I immediately shared with friends and family when I got back home and their response was same as mine. Will definitely be getting some moâ đž
Gm đ
The day is off to a nice start when you have some @frootsnft juice for the morning commute in NYC đ§
@0xAvast really delivered with these đ„
If you tried Froots juices at NFT NYC and would be down to give them another try, please let me know.
Iâll send you a small case from our current inventory for free. We just need you to tell us how the taste held up and if you still like them as much
We usually produce our juices on the west coast (near LA) but the NFT NYC batch was made in a new facility on the east coast!
There shouldnât be any issues but we need to make sure that they still taste as good as theyâre supposed to 1 month later, before moving forward with a proper contract with our east coast manufacturer.
Just checked our Froots juice inventory, we have a few cases of juices left from our NFT NYC run.
1 case = 24 bottles
10 Golden One cases + 14 units (254)
10 Green One cases + 16 units (256)
10 Orange One cases + 18 units (258)
14 Red One cases + 17 units (353)
What should we do with these?
PS: If you live in the US and want to shoot some content with our juices, lmk! đ€