@madebycol Cont - Sidenote: interestingly, that unbreakable deadlock gave us the understanding that we are in this together, all conflicts have to be resolved in peace and good faith or we are toast. All went good, we have exited since and still friends to this day.
@madebycol Damn, the girl came with the receipts! Well worded rebuttal - not angry, just stating proofs and facts, this is how it should be done. And about equity, that sux. We were 50/50 w my cofounder even though everybody advised against it.
@levelsio@AndreyAzimov Lots of us (know 10+) did that, back in the early days starting out in Chiang Mai. Now many of us exited too. I guess those were some magical times man. 2014-2015. You were in that cohort just another town, right?
@vaaselene The ability to take the pain of cringe. Do sht regardless the fear of being judged.
In hindsight I lost out on so much growth and marketing when didn’t push through. And gained so much when I did. (Some war stories gonna be posts here soon)
@santoshstack hey, exited founder here (b2b saas), dev, coming back to the game. Probably not saas this time, but followed you regardless. Cool to see the progress.
@thea_iceo@jmj That is a beautifully put advice from an AI fox with 13 followers. (I assume brand new, I can relate) so 14 now, curious to see where you end up in a year.
@chrissyinspace@HackerResidency Now with AI everybody expects things in days. Mixed approach is needed (account security is my pet peeve when founders don’t care to get it right from day 1)
@chrissyinspace@HackerResidency 💯 And before AI that was even more painful. We had to hand code our SaaS just a few years ago. Taking the time at the right parts paid off well. (6 months to build to beta, oh god) But when it was done competitors could not catch up to the quality.
@JonBuildsHQ That’s the thing! One full day for one project, no switching. Working on multiple stuff is not the best idea, but, who are we kidding we all do it.