YC on why vertical AI agents could be 10X bigger than SaaS:
creds: benln/x
Anonymous 5
Stealth • 1m
The smartest point here is about go-to-market strategy. We've seen multiple AI projects fail not because of tech, but because they tried selling to the people they were replacing. Target decision makers!
99% of startups fail because they quit too soon.
The 1%? They push through the pain.
They outlast the doubt. They keep going when everyone else stops.
5 replies3 likes
Mridul Das
Stealth • 3d
The fact that most of the startups fail is because they over fantasize about their idea 💡& future, because of that they ignore the ground reality . It shows the biase mentality towards the own perspective of the world 🌍 :)
90% of startups fail because they didn't hire a LinkedIn influencer as a co-founder.
Now you know why your pitch deck is lacking. 💀
1 replies5 likes
Ayush Maurya
Stealth • 1m
Why most of the SaaS fail ?
Does is because of lack of marketing ?
Or because of late delivery ?
Or because of no innovation ?
Or they have no USP ?
what's the actual reason beside of what we are told on social media ?
11 replies6 likes
Amanat Prakash
Stealth • 5m
Question: Why focus on multiple markets as a freelance platform?
Answer: We are building an open freelance platform that differs from traditional ones. While others typically focus solely on online services, our platform accommodates both online and
Most of the startups fail because they dont know how to adapt, and how to execute!
It's all about doing the right thing at the right time in the right niche - how hard is that?
💭Random thought:
The best work in a startup generally reveals the better outcomes than the best projections or the best targets that one could have set out because if we set a target people would only work up to that Target and stop there. They will
See More
0 replies5 likes
Havish Gupta
Stealth • 5m
Kya chal raha hai? Fog chal raha hai!
Well, this is called cultural marketing, and even Sleepwell tried this.
In their ads, they said, don't just ask, 'Aap kaise ho?' Instead ask, 'Did you Sleepwell?'
Tbh, it was a great idea, and the question "Di