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borodutch
@warpcastadmin.eth
the difference between farcaster team and you (the reader) is that farcaster is a vc-backed company that has enough runway to last into the next century you, sitting where you are, with $100 in your bank account, don't have any right or time to focus; you have to play the attention economy facebook didn't succeed because zuck focused, it succeeded because four things were right: - luck - market (timing) - zuck's grit and ability to move fast *in this order* do not slow down because you're "focusing" if something doesn't work, drop it, and work on something else in my experience, you know if something works or not *within the first week* of launching it's no longer apple II time, it's the attention economy we live in *never* assume that if something worked for someone it would work for you statistics shows that *it wouldn't* don't fight the nature, embrace it vibe code launch check repeat until you succeed
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Tony D’Addeo
@deodad
fair points but seem orthogonal to focusing? even for us focusing most often means letting go of the hundred things we’ve started and could keep tweaking in favor of asymmetric opportunities
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borodutch
@warpcastadmin.eth
good book on the topic: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/60097435-quit
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borodutch
@warpcastadmin.eth
for you it's letting go of hundred things, your team can afford it for people with $100 in their bank accounts? they need to try all these 100 things one by one, test them, see if they work, and only then pivot for farcaster focus is good (you got your product, you need to make it successful) for indie hackers focus can be detrimental — see how even levelsio has like 18% success rate if you stay in 82% of failed ideas for too long you are ngmi
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