The one nobody talks about enough is owning a category instead of competing in one.
Most businesses show up trying to be better. faster, cheaper, more features. But better is subjective and expensive to prove. Different is easier to own.
Seen it work firsthand. reframe the problem, and suddenly you're not in the same race anymore.
Everyone talks about “data-driven Web3 marketing” like it’s a solved problem. It’s not.
Attribution is messy, wallets aren’t clean user identities, and half the “engagement” metrics are just noise during hype cycles.
You can track more than before, sure. But pretending it’s as precise as Web2 performance marketing is how teams end up over-optimizing the wrong signals again.
The "Parallel" Workflow is the new baseline.
The creator of Cloud Code doesn't use one screen. He has 7 agents running at once.
One is on SEO. One is on CRO. One is shipping features. One is building your GTM strategy. If your eyes don’t hurt at the end of the day from managing a literal fleet of digital engineers, you aren't working at scale.
just applied to @fdotinc
I built a platform that turns one selfie into 30 founder videos — with your face and your voice.
Trained on 5000+ viral videos that actually performed.
Rt & comment “viral” and I’ll send free credits.
Honestly? When I saw this, I just shook my head.
Meta burned $80-100 billion on a world nobody wanted to live in.
Horizon worlds peaked at like 200-300k monthly users. One random Roblox game was smoking the entire thing in traffic.
And I feel zero surprise. We watched the exact same movie in crypto in 2021.
Virtual Land. NFT worlds. Decentralized metaverses. Everyone got high on the same vision
"The next internet is virtual worlds"
Meta did it with corporate money and no ownership for users. Crypto did it with NFTs and tokens.
Both failed for the same reason. We were selling the sci-fi fantasy before anyone built something people actually wanted to use every day. Crypto at least lets people own their stuff.
But owning a plot of digital land that stays empty is still worthless. Meta owning it all? even worse.
Honestly, I'm a little relieved it's over. All that money and hype distracted everyone for years.
The funny part? They had all the money. All the talent. All the distribution. And still couldn't make people want to hang out in their virtual world.
If a winning version ever comes, it'll be from scrappy builders who actually care about usage. Not trillion-dollar companies forcing a narrative.
The projects growing fastest rn aren't running one brand account.
They're running 5 niche pages, posting 50x a week, and letting the algo sort who cares.