3 Lessons From Our "Failures" at Startup (Part I)

Fred QI
17 replies
Lessons Learned After One Year of Founding the Company and Being Interviewed by Top Accelerators, such as Y Combinator, PearX, ERA. We are the lucky ones, but also the miserable ones. We got invited to the interview by those top accelerators/investors including Y Combinator, PearX, and Entrepreneur Roundtable Accelerator (ERA), but got rejected by all of them afterward. We started two cool AI projects together in the last year but decided to put them on hold for a while (maybe later we will pick them up again). These projects remained unpublished, buried in our GitHub directories for a long time, but the lessons we learned from them are invaluable. We love all of them as we love our kids. 1️⃣ Lesson 1: Less is More Probably you've heard about this thousands of times, feeling like a cliché. But here we want to share some very painful lessons we learned from past failures. This may not apply to all startups, especially hard-tech businesses making cool things, so we only talk about our case as a consumer-facing product. During our first product, we made something which was to use AI to create a virtual space, and we also wanted to shape it into a developer platform inviting many developers to develop AI tools for creating virtual space. It sounds very confusing, right? Yes, it does. During our interview with the founder of Twitch, OpenAI’s Interim CEO Emmet Shear at Y Combinator, he asked one simple question that none of us could answer. “YouTube’s fundamental unit is a video, Twitter’s fundamental unit is a message post, so how about yours?” And we got rejected, and the reason was the same as you imagined: he did not understand what we were doing. We then realized how important it was to keep our ideas as simple as possible because at the end of the day, as a consumer-facing product, we need to talk. We need to talk with many stakeholders, including our users, investors, and also our team. How could we expect our users to explain our product to their friends by saying, "I found something really cool, it's a developer platform for inviting developers to develop AI tools for creating virtual spaces." That just wouldn't work. We are living in an era where people may have limited attention, so we would keep our product as simple as enough to make our users easily understand and use it. Because at the end of the day, we need to talk. Talking with many people. I personally love one sentence said by our marketing executive Roman, “In the design field, if you don’t know what is a good feature to be added, then start by removing one.” * If people are interested in this kind of topic, I would share the other two lessons learned so far since I don't want to overwhelm our community. Thanks!

Replies

Lokesh Joshi
Thanks for sharing your experience, in my career i learn that focusing on the process promotes growth, skill development, and resilience, leading to long-term success. It reduces stress and fosters satisfaction in daily efforts, creating a solid foundation for future achievements. A strong process often results in sustainable, better outcomes, emphasizing continuous improvement over singular results.
Fred QI
@lokeshjoshi31 Thank you Lokesh! You are absolutely right, designing a great process which can lead us to continuous growth is another top lesson on our list, also that is the reason entrepreneurs should exist.
Share
Salar Davari
Thanks for sharing your experience Fred. My first Startup was a failure too and I got that lesson. I also learned that that I had make fundamental changes in the product. Now things are looking up!
Share
Fred QI
@salar__davari Glad to hear that you are building something amazing. Thanks for the connection. I just checked your profile, the real estate photo editing is really cool and very easily understood for me even though I am not in this area. I also shared this idea with my friends involved in the real estate industry, they all thought this idea was really exciting and promising!
Share
Salar Davari
@frederick_qi1 Thanks Fred. Yea it's a growing trend in real estate and we're doing our best to provide good service to our customers.
Gurkaran Singh
Ah, the age-old wisdom of "Less is More" strikes again! Like trying to fit a neural network into a Raspberry Pi Zero, sometimes simplicity is key. 😉 Let's keep unraveling those startup lessons one gem at a time!
Share
Zenda
LinkedCRM AI
LinkedCRM AI
I think the teaser is very important.
Share
Zenda
LinkedCRM AI
LinkedCRM AI
@frederick_qi1 We are launching on today! Look forward to your support ❤️
Share
Fred QI
@zenda1122 yes, that's very true.
Share
Fred QI
@zenda1122 Followed! Really cool product
Share
Zenda
LinkedCRM AI
LinkedCRM AI
@frederick_qi1 Thank you for your support❤️
Sree
I can relate to being rejected by YC (W24), and it's for the same reason as well! We lacked clarity in what we were providing to our users (B2B) and we couldn't explain our product in one line. We were all over the place. But that rejection helped us understand the way we're approaching a problem is wrong and made us talk to tons of potential users. Thanks for sharing this Fred!
Share
Fred QI
@sreenington Thanks Scree! Congratulations to receive an interview invitation from YC, this is a great first step to prove that the team is definitely a top notch one. As long as we keep iterating our ideas and products, we would eventually deliver something cool to the world. Looking forward to knowing your product!
Share
Jenny
Thank you for sharing these invaluable lessons from your startup experiences, Fred! The idea that "less is more" really resonates, especially when it comes to product design and customer interactions. Simplifying the product to make it user-friendly is crucial. Additionally, understanding the importance of timing and learning from feedback are essential takeaways for anyone in the startup ecosystem. Your insights are incredibly helpful, and I look forward to Part II. Best of luck with your future ventures,
Share