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talltimtom | 7 years ago
He should have realized his personal shortcomings and partnered with someone who had the qualities he lacked.
talltimtom | 7 years ago
He should have realized his personal shortcomings and partnered with someone who had the qualities he lacked.
mstade|7 years ago
glenneroo|7 years ago
I agree too, the author really could have dug deeper and asked some questions instead of just focusing on his 30-years of failure (with some uplifting moments).
ohmatt|7 years ago
sixQuarks|7 years ago
skookumchuck|7 years ago
TehCorwiz|7 years ago
JumpCrisscross|7 years ago
For a mass-market product, sure. But there’s no need to go from 0 to mass market. Had he priced his boots at $900 a piece and essentially sold prototypes, he may have been able to hit $100k in sales within a year. That’s the kind of traction investors look for.
narrator|7 years ago
Instead, he tried to do everything himself thinking he was a real business genius when he only had the idea and was a decent engineer. This is a typical engineering mindset. Engineers think they are smarter than all these genius marketers and hustlers out there. They think that being good at math means you're good at marketing, but they are really different skills and good marketers and promoters should be respected for the unique and genuine value they bring.
jshowa3|7 years ago
rat9988|7 years ago
wolco|7 years ago
codegeek|7 years ago
nkkollaw|7 years ago
manigandham|7 years ago
yitchelle|7 years ago
The big lesson learn here is to seek help in the area where you failing in, in his case - closing those sales!