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Nico Gallardo πŸ„ pfp
Nico Gallardo πŸ„
@nicnode
HOW TO FAIL AT A HACKATHON This @ethglobal Brussels Hackathon was different. I was a mentor for the first time and I absolutely love the experience. Here's a thread of the 7 biggest problems teams face and how to overcome them. Spoiler alert: The problems weren't technical.
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Nico Gallardo πŸ„ pfp
Nico Gallardo πŸ„
@nicnode
1. No clear goal will lead you nowhere Most teams want do everything: be a finalist, win many bounties, make a fully fleshed product, etc... But there's only so much you can do in a weekend, and many of them are not compatible. For example, if you focus on integrating too many bounties, you probably won't have the creative freedom to build a finalist project).
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Nico Gallardo πŸ„ pfp
Nico Gallardo πŸ„
@nicnode
To solve this, simply pick 1 goal, and put the others as secondary priorities. Here are some ideas and => their focus. - Build a (creative) finalist project => working MVP + narrative - Hunt for bounties => prioritise technologies that fit your idea and keep adding them - Work on (a feature for) a long-term project => get feedback from partners and mentors, seek potential grants - Hiring => try to replicate the roles of the real project you're hiring for
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Nico Gallardo πŸ„ pfp
Nico Gallardo πŸ„
@nicnode
2. Too many ideas, too little focus It's good to be ambitious at a hacakthon, but the problem comes from underestimating the amount of work you can do in just 36 hours. Stop adding more features, focus on an MVP and create a list of priorities (especially if you're bounty-hunting). You'll likely only manage the #1 prio ones.
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Nico Gallardo πŸ„ pfp
Nico Gallardo πŸ„
@nicnode
3. Too caught up in details without an MVP Many times I was approached with questions around finding loopholes in tokenomics, how to make it all completely decentralised, etc... all this without having an idea of the MVP. Solution: Don't be a perfectionist until you have an MVP idea you can ship in 36 hours. Focus on the most basic features, understand the potential flaws and explore them only if you have time at the end. Be transparent about them in your presentation.
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