What is your dumbest decision as a founder?
Nick from FirstHR
7 replies
Share your experience with stupid decisions and what they taught you.
Don't be shy :)
Replies
Alok Kumar@alokkumar
ChatPdf.so: Chat with pdf
Not spending $500 on an AI influencer on twitter during AI hype in february 2023. The influencer was getting half a million views on his each tweet. I thought $500 is too much. My product could've got thousands in mrr.
One of my dumbest decision.
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@alokkumar You never know. I know a case where a team did a promo with a top blogger and got zero.
Muku.ai
That’s for my first product, about four years ago. I spent hundreds of dollars on a logo before anything else was even set up—not even code or UI. Honestly, it’s *really* embarrassing to think about now. 😅
I'll start.
One of my dumbest decisions as a founder was working with a large company without a proper contract. As you understand, we were not paid in the end. 😁
minimalist phone: creating folders
@nickanisimov au :D that hurts. But in some cases even when you have a proper contract, the other side cannot be fair and pay you... and there are a few people who wants to spend time over courts, layers etc.
When it comes to me... the dumb thing was when I thought my idea is good – executed it... and that was everything :D first, I should so some research.
@busmark_w_nika I think everyone has made this mistake :)
Not investing in our website's UI/UX early on. We focused so much on building out features that we neglected design and user experience. By the time we realized how critical UX was for conversion and retention, our competitors with slicker interfaces had already grabbed a big chunk of market share. Lesson learned - great UI/UX is worth investing in from day one!