What's one piece of generally accepted advice that didn't work out for you?
Misha Krunic
18 replies
I thought it would be interesting to start a discussion on this because I think specific individual experiences that go against the grain can be invaluable when it comes to growth and learning.
It can be related to whatever - launching on PH, work, organization, anything really!
Replies
Abel G. weldu@abel_product
Not advice per se. But, the whole downplaying the role of 'luck' in one's success. At the end of the day, Everything is luck. You were lucky(unlucky) enough to be you, to have your surrounding, your opportunities/misfortunes, to have/not have your work ethic. Luck is everything in life.
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Price2Spy
@abel_product I think another way of looking at it is defining things that you can and can not control. The ones that you can't are something you have to make the best use of by sometimes adjusting to them and working on the things that are in your control.
Between
@abel_product This is outside of anything PH related but I think this article is great for talking about the role of luck. Or more specifically, talent.
https://slatestarcodex.com/2015/...
@abel_product a few days ago, I saw this video that explains how luck plays a huge part in people success (mathematical demonstration eve if you consider it add only 5% to your work): https://fb.watch/8qsu41DcKR/
Wavel AI
@abel_product As Kunfu Panda finds out, "There is no secret ingredient". :)
ProductAI
Working weekends or more than 8h per day.
I think " working our asses off " is the advice that never worked well for me. chasing a goal, someone else has set for you,leaves you mentally and physically drained.
Over the time I have realised that taking breaks and taking time for yourself is fine, setting your own boundaries is so important if you wish to work in a same field for a long time.
The whole BS about "You can sleep when you're dead" and other stuff that glorifies burnout culture is self-defeating and perpetuated by people who are overcompensating for their lack of talent and creativity.
Log Harvestor
Launching soon!
Back before the Presidential Election in 2020, I suggested to someone that I considered a mentor of developing a tool that companies could use to track vaccination status. I told him that Trump was saying the vaccines were almost finished. But he is a pretty hard line liberal and hated Trump. He told me that the idea was pointless because the vaccines were never going to make it to market...
Well, I took his advice despite his bias, and started working on Log Harvestor. Well, roughly 10 months later, I really wish I had followed my gut. I would have a super relevant, mature product, that most people are still trying to build.
I guess the lessons I learned was:
1. Sometimes you have to go with your gut
2. Even the smartest people can still be lead astray by emotions or politics
Also, I am kind of glad that I didn't jump into the vaccine idea. It just seems to politically heated. So I guess it worked out either way! lol
Price2Spy
@solomon_bush Interesting story, it's definitely always a risk to go into a politically charged market, regardless of the way you look at it.
I'm glad you got something out of the whole situation!
Cheers!
CEOs are often told to raise as much capital as possible since they do not know what the future funding markets will look like. I've done this. It was terrible advice.
I've built bootstrapped companies that were very successful vs. a company I built with $60 million of VC funding that, when sold, only generated a return for the late-stage VCs.
I recommend the "lean startup" approach, where you maximize cash efficiency and product development instead of spending money on expensive marketing and sales programs and unnecessary headcount.
No one has a crystal ball and until you are sure you have a product fit spend as little money as possible. Want to learn more about this idea read "The Purple Cow" by Seth Godin. You want to find a purple cow and that does not require millions of dollars.
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The one piece of advice that didnt work out for me is to focus on only studying and keeping all things secondary even if you are naturally inclined to something.
"Look he is a generally accepted Angel Investor, you should talk to him/her" usually does not work for us :)
Listen to what other people say.
I'd say this piece of advice might work better after a slight update - Listen, analyze and then consider to apply what other people say.
Going blindly just by listening to what other recommend, say, suggest can be extremely risks for a huge bulk of reasons. Think, always think and do everything to form a solid opinion of your own.