Stephan pfp
Stephan
@stephancill
In crypto we tend to forget the hoops people will jump through if they really want something If you think your product is failing because the ux is bad then you may have bigger problems
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mark mollé pfp
mark mollé
@marmo
I agree. I call this the Publisher’s Clearinghouse phenomenon. There was this guy, Ed McMahon, who used to show up on people’s doorsteps in America with a cartoonishly huge check for a million dollars, and people went bananas. I mean full-blown, cut-and-paste-a-million-little-stamps-bananas. They’d do these elaborate stamp puzzles and mail them in with the hope that maybe, just maybe, Ed would knock on their door. The real trick—the heartbreaking, sock-you-in-the-ribs trick—is getting people to move, really move, when there’s no pot of gold. No real money. No clear reward. Just the vague, hopeful scent of meaningful value. That’s where most products die. They die on the altar of unclear value and even slightly inconvenient UX, because it turns out people aren’t as motivated by community (before it’s formed) or creativity (for the sake of creativity) or “the joy of discovery” as we—appreciators of art, math and culture—like to think. Not without frictionless fomo-peppered path.
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mark mollé pfp
mark mollé
@marmo
the reasons why i truly believe in @jessepollak’s vision for commentcoins is that they enable anyone to instantly turn anything into a potentially valuable work of art (a cultural readymade if you will)- this work could one day be as valuable as any of check from ed mcmahon. it’s that feeling when you’re creation contentcoins. that lottery ticket that i think will make this the killer consumer product. btw i’ve personally onboarded 10 gen z users to zora pre-noon on this sunny Saturday in NYC https://zora.co/coin/base:0xebe8f61025f624081aca50cbac43c7617638282d?referrer=0x52da438ebc256c23fec296d86c0db0b249fd188d
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