People donโt choose the best products.
They choose the products they understand fastest.
Thatโs why:
โ average products dominate markets
โ unknown founders get ignored
โ technically better ideas lose constantly
Most people think growth is a distribution problem.
Itโs usually a perception problem first.
After working across content, community, BD, sales, and marketing, I kept seeing the exact same pattern.
Before someone buys:
Before they share:
Before they care:
Their brain asks one question:
โWhat is this, and why should I care?โ
The brands that answer that fastest win.
Thatโs what I study here:
โ perception
โ positioning
โ narrative
โ why certain things feel inevitable before they even launch
Joined @ProofofIntern's weekly marketing chit-chat for the first time today.
Interesting conversations around the different roles social platforms play in building trust, attention & conversion.
Left with a few ideas worth exploring further.
Will definitely be back next week.
@SmurfySteve@manyaaww We're saying the same thing.
The question isn't how many followers do you have?
Rather it's, can you prove you know what you're doing?
@0xNairolf most of cryptoโs confusion comes from mixing interest with demand.
interest is loud, demand is what people keep paying for without being reminded.
most projects disappear in the gap between the two.
@I_amDorris hard lesson in how trust breaks when structure is missing.
weekly pay only works when accountability is continuous on both sides.
take the L, tighten the process next time.
more opportunities will come, but systems matter more than intent.
๐ซ๐