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Jayme Hoffman pfp
Jayme Hoffman
@jayme
We’re winding down Frameboard 🖼🛹✌ Here’s a thread of our journey, mistakes, lessons, and everything in between—hoping it helps others building in crypto.
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Jayme Hoffman pfp
Jayme Hoffman
@jayme
1/ The idea The original idea for Frameboard was a Pinterest-like app and protocol where users could earn from their curation. We thought crypto could empower higher-quality content curation and that users would support great curators by collecting (paying for) it. I came to this idea after thinking a lot about: - What products don’t give users skin in the game (i.e., Pinterest)? - What could grow quickly on new web3 social primitives (i.e., frames, bots, NFTs, XMTP)? https://warpcast.com/jayme/0xb8415290005aac659e6879db47817e50d29e2c7b
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Jayme Hoffman pfp
Jayme Hoffman
@jayme
2/ Traction Since launching in March, hundreds of users curated over 6,500 posts to 800 boards, with thousands more consuming those boards on the web app, Farcaster, and XMTP. We saw Frameboards for travel, food, fashion, art, train stations, mood boards, NFTs, erc20s, and more. We experimented with a ton of features, including Farcaster frames and cast actions, browser extension, OpenFrames and XMTP notifications, NFT curation, collectible boards, AI curation, and more.
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Jayme Hoffman
@jayme
3/ PMF By May, it was clear the product wasn’t working, and our core assumptions were wrong. 99% of users churned, no one wanted to collect boards or the NFTs curated on them, and we grew skeptical of people collecting content as a big frequent consumer behavior. I remember walking around a rainy London one afternoon, thinking, “Damn, we built the wrong product for crypto.” In that moment, I felt like I trully and painfully understood what product-market fit is—and what it isn’t.
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Jayme Hoffman
@jayme
4/ Lesson: Avoid SISPing The first mistake we made with Frameboard was approaching it from "solution in search of a problem." At this point, we were out of ideas and desperate to figure out what to build next. We let impatience guide us, brainstorming crypto and web3 socical ideas instead of identifying a problem and reasoning from first principles. No surprise—we ended up with mostly bad ideas and a few that just sounded good.
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Jayme Hoffman
@jayme
5/ Lesson: Solve the right problem for the right user While cool and fun to build, Frameboard was the wrong product for today’s crypto audience. Active crypto users prefer text-based content, are time-constrained, and mostly driven by speculation. Frameboard was more visual, time-intensive, and lacked speculative elements. We didn't solve a real problem the market wanted solved and built something people didn’t need. Don’t make that mistake—be brutally honest about who your users are, what their behaviors are, and what they truly want.
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Jayme Hoffman
@jayme
6/ Lesson: Don't forget about demand Like many Web3 ideas, Frameboard sounded great from the supply side (i.e., the curator) but was weak on the demand side (i.e., the collector). Every creator wants more money and control—that’s a given. The real question is: why will the demand-side users spend their time and/or money in a meaningful and frequent way? We struggled to answer that. Without demand, supply-side users—whether content creators, platform developers, marketplace sellers, or service providers—won’t be satisfied and will churn. Demand is the game and key to providing a magical experience for the supply side.
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Jayme Hoffman
@jayme
7/ Take your time pivoting In hindsight, we didn't spend enough time between pivots. We were eager to build and ship (always be launching), and didn’t like waiting around. Looking back, I wish we had taken a little more time to research, understand users and their problem, and develop a strong hypothesis that we were going after a big, important market and be missionaries about it. I think in crypto, more so than other industries, teams really need to be grounded in truth and mission-driven to navigate all the skepticism and market swings.
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Jayme Hoffman
@jayme
8/ Curation For those interested in curating or building around curation, here are some tools and ideas worth exploring:
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Jayme Hoffman pfp
Jayme Hoffman
@jayme
9/ Thanks A huge thank you to all the Frameboarders who experimenting with the product and gave thoughtful feedback, including @kugusha.eth, @andreaboi.eth @janehk @usersteen.eth @steph @vm @chicbangs.eth @oxb @polmaire.eth @linda @ahn.eth @twolf @0xshash @grimmtidings @beecurious and many others! This was a fun experiment, and I’m proud of the product and the community we built.
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Jayme Hoffman
@jayme
10/ Here's the full post on @paragraph https://blog.jaymehoffman.com/goodbye-frameboard
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Linda Xie
@linda
Thank you for sharing your experience and everything you built!
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Ben - [C/x]
@benersing
If you went back to the start, knowing what you know now, how would you have pressure tested more whether it was “a solution in search of a problem”?
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CHIC pfp
CHIC
@chicbangs.eth
Thank you for sharing your journey! It was such a fun product. I look forward to seeing what you do next!
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kugusha 🦋
@kugusha.eth
@jayme thank you for writing this. Looking forward for what’s next for you!
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rish
@rish
thanks for writing and sharing! :)
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yashwant🎩 pfp
yashwant🎩
@ywc
come back stronger king
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CloudomEndpoint
@cloudomendpoint
Sad to hear, but valuable insights shared. Trust the lessons learned will pave the way for success in future endeavors
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tomu
@tomu
thanks for sharing this journey!
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Airzend351
@airzend351
Sad to see Frameboard winding down, but grateful for the insights shared. Valuable lessons for the crypto community
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