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@fun
let's say you have 3 types of users using your product, but you need to cater to one how do you decide which user type to focus on?
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@links
Thereā€™s too much Ā«Ā it dependsĀ Ā» here. Aiming for revenue or adoption? Is it actually 3 types of users or 3 types of use cases (itā€™s different)? What is the change you want to be in the world? No one can really tell you how to prioritize. Thatā€™s your job, yeah?
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@fun
aiming to define the exact problem farcaster studio is capable of solving user a - channel owner user b - small account user c - etc https://warpcast.com/fun/0x7f3c9dab
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@links
Personally I would prioritize by ability and willingness to pay for a solution. Early on you can figure out by asking people Ā«Ā would you pay x for this?Ā Ā» or actually asking them to pay. Then see which one converts better. Long run you can shore up your product thinking using more representative research if you need to.
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@trh
Yes on willingness to pay. For channels, thereā€™s already a rev model so that makes sense as a point of focus. In addition/instead of asking hypothetical ā€œwould youā€, ask, ā€œwhat have you paid in the past?ā€ Or ā€œwhat is this worth to you?ā€ Or like links said, give them a number. Once you know what they want out of it, you can paint the picture, ā€œsay in three months, youā€™ve achieved [whatever], will that have been worth $X?ā€
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