What's the biggest mistake you've made as a founder?
Richard Fang
103 replies
This sounds silly but when I launched my first startup 5 years ago, we didn't put in a vesting schedule 😅
Wanted to see what others have done but also things we know to avoid in the future!
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al3sha is Salt@al3sha
I once started a tech company at the beginning of the DotCom ... bust.
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@al3sha @dean_ayer Almost every dot-com idea from 1999 that failed will succeed. - Marc Andreessen
@al3sha @dean_ayer Damn that's amazing haha
@richardfliu I promise, I learned A LOT! Wouldn't trade it in for a new car :D
Two biggest mistakes - insufficient problem hypothesis validation and poor mentor-mentee values fit.
@gogloballakshmi What happened with your mentor - mentee part?
@richardfliu we just didn't see eye to eye in terms of execution.. My strategy was different from theirs and the communication style was a mismatch when discussing disagreements. Of course I understand this on postmortem.. I did not have this clarity when I was caught up in action.
@gogloballakshmi Was this an advisor presented to you by your investors?
@prateek_mathur mentors and advisors are not the same... I was bootstrapped, never took investor money... startups are about communities too..
@gogloballakshmi Ah that sucks :/
I should have hired a mentor who would force me to think more clearly about our startup and hold me accountable. Or join a preacceleration program. I think we would grow much faster.
@artem_smirnov A mentor is to facilitate, IMO nothing should be force especially for a founder.. What I see is you wanted someone to communicate with, so a matching communication style will help with achieving goals..
@artem_smirnov I've done that, am doing that. I'm having to rethink because I'm self-funding and this is expensive expensive. But she helped me re-pivot and if she holds me accountable (which is a big deal) - which she has - then I need to maybe just eat it and live with it. I was literally re-thinking the investment this morning. It's painful because "intangibles" like "clarifies", "calms", "synthesizes" is not lines of code or bugs killed, newsletters written, or instagram posts.
@gogloballakshmi Yes, by "force" I mean asking uncomfortable questions that I avoid asking myself.
I think the ones which cost me the most time and cash were:
1. didn't make market/idea validation with the clients, before start the work. (I just had the assumptions)
2. Lack of a mentor.
but it's hard to avoid that when you are a 1st-time founder. You want to launch asap, you think you have the best idea in the world, and so on.. :D
@adrian_topka Haha 100% - it seems like market/idea validation is a common theme
Not releasing until all planned features are completed. For https://watermark.ink I built a complete visual editor for custom templates and most my users hated it and said its confusing.. I thought its not worth wasting time in customer support, so sadly I have to completely remove templates feature (this feature took 50% of total dev time). Must have gone to market early and got this feedback.
Biggest mistake I made was misreading the market and having tunnel vision on a future customer base that didn’t exist rather than focusing on the customer base that did exist and was happily using the product already.
My biggest mistake is actually trying to Avoid mistakes by applying a specific framework. (lean ... )
Mistakes might be very different depends on products type.
Sometimes trying to release as soon as possible can get you troubles
but sometimes you have to release asap and go further to reach potential customers.
Not Trying AB testing outbound vs inbound marketing for software based product.
@ifinnaoui Some good points! I think finding the fine line between releasing early and taking too long comes with experience haha
@richardfliu that's it ! EXPERIENCE.
There is always something to learn as a founder.
Not enough focus on marketing.
@eddieaich That's what I'm hunkering down now with myself before going to market. It's tough though.
Two biggest mistakes - Thinking about opportunities too long before execution. If executing, waiting too long with talking to potential customers in an early stage phase.
Not communicating enough - still working on that
Underestimating how expensive less-than-ideal product-market fit is when dealing with government institutions.
Giving away too much of the company for early help.
@seeenjake Could I ask what you did specifically here?
Waiting for around 6 months for US registration when we could have started off with an Indian Company.
Co-founder/ Important people breakup. When I know somebody for years and think that we can be business partners, it turns out that it is all illusion. I would be brutally honest to myself as a solo founder rather having fancy people on board.
@emmanguyen Yeah I acutally ran into this problem with one of my friends. Realised we're really great as friends but terrible as a co-founder partner (she's more of a corporat person).
@richardfliu Startup game is starting from scratch. Not simply copy & paste solution from one place and put it to another market. The corp/ big org is well-designed process - Doing well in those does not mean you will thrive in startup.
Procrastinating. It has always been a huge issue for me, and has lead to some great ideas never being pursued.
@angelina_magr I was excited for them to be a reality. But I was not excited about the pains of building them. So I procrastinated.
Not validating idea!
OH GOD, so many mistakes. Overpaying employees and not negotiating influencer contracts.
did a lot of that