Most Web3 products don't fail because of tech.
They fail because of trust.
Bad onboarding, confusing flows, vague value prop = no traction, no raise.
Great UX isn't a polish layer. It's your pitch, product, and growth engine.
Chris Halaskax.comMost Web3 products don't fail because of tech. They fail because of trust. Bad onboarding, confusing flows, vague value prop = no traction, no raise. Great UX isn't a polish layer. It's your pitch, product, and growth engine.
1. Most founders are bad at growth, so if you're amazing at it, the advantage is significant.
Consider: Most startups die not because founders are bad or products suck, but because they couldn't figure out how to get anyone to try them.
Julian Shapirox.comBut here's the trap founders (myself included) often fall into: most people don't give a damn about your vision. They care about what your product can do for them today .
Sari Azout • Problems Sublime Solves—at Least for Me
The key difference in Web3 era is, though the product still plays a vital role in its success, it doesn't have to come first though. A clear purpose and a stronger community play a major role in its success. A strong community with skin in the game works toward bringing more like-minded users to the community.