My wife had a startup (B2B) which in the beginning had no traction. It took some years until big companies could be sold too, that had said "go away" just two years earlier. She successfully sold her startup after some years.
The last invoice she (she was Head of Sales) sent out was 10000x the amount of the first invoice.
3 months seems very short. But this is the reason why innovation fails in large companies. They start a project, after 12 months it only has sales of $100k, the company makes $1B, so the project makes no dent. The second year this happens the project gets killed. They forget they need to stick with innovative products for years to make it work, just like startups.
There's a lot of truth in this, but at the same time not every product/service/feature is going to make it, and it's much easier and cheaper to fail early rather than fail after many years. Also sometimes what might be a success in the hands of one person won't be in the hands of another due to their skills.
Separating things that are going to fail and those that might make it is the whole problem, and it's not something to be underestimated.
"First, there’s a Jekyll plugin that hooks into the site’s build step...
Second, there’s an “agent” script that gets added to the post’s <head>..."
And then there has to be a whole payment system to handle the subscriptions, which is apparently separate.
This requires support and hand-holding to get it to work. It's nice to be able to host your own paid-subscription blog, but it's inherently complicated to get that to work. It's so much easier to sign up for some service that does the whole job. Especially just for a blog.
This is also why most "federated" systems don't get traction. Per-user, it's so much more work than a centralized system.
[+] [-] KingOfCoders|2 years ago|reply
The last invoice she (she was Head of Sales) sent out was 10000x the amount of the first invoice.
3 months seems very short. But this is the reason why innovation fails in large companies. They start a project, after 12 months it only has sales of $100k, the company makes $1B, so the project makes no dent. The second year this happens the project gets killed. They forget they need to stick with innovative products for years to make it work, just like startups.
This is part of the Overnight-Success-Fallacy.
[+] [-] danpalmer|2 years ago|reply
Separating things that are going to fail and those that might make it is the whole problem, and it's not something to be underestimated.
[+] [-] paulddraper|2 years ago|reply
https://xkcd.com/1827/
[+] [-] Animats|2 years ago|reply
This requires support and hand-holding to get it to work. It's nice to be able to host your own paid-subscription blog, but it's inherently complicated to get that to work. It's so much easier to sign up for some service that does the whole job. Especially just for a blog.
This is also why most "federated" systems don't get traction. Per-user, it's so much more work than a centralized system.
[+] [-] all2|2 years ago|reply
For example, Ghost has payment systems integrations. I'd imagine there's a docker container ready to go for deployment.
[+] [-] RamblingCTO|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] guideamigo|2 years ago|reply
I have been working on https://guideamigo.com as a side-project and only in the last month, I'm seeing some traction.
[+] [-] victorbjorklund|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] EspressoGPT|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] latexr|2 years ago|reply
https://docs.github.com/en/pages/setting-up-a-github-pages-s...
[+] [-] Brajeshwar|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] benoliver999|2 years ago|reply
Not really had a reason to switch.
[+] [-] lionkor|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] Kuinox|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] bayindirh|2 years ago|reply