| I've been working on my startup full-time for 13 months now. (http://taketake.com) I can't seem to nail that design - that feeling I'm looking for. We've changed the UI and the design roughly 5 times now. 6 months ago I stumbled on the Lean Startup philosophy; the launch early, scrappy and iterate doing customer development. I kept telling myself that I will launch in a few weeks so it was too late to "start from scratch" and apply the Lean Startup idea. But it's been 6 months now and I can't seem to get out of this stupid cycle of me being unhappy and wanting to have everything perfect before I launch. Because of this, other startups like Blippy, Swipely (and gdgt to some extent) beat me to the push. My reaction when I saw this was to try harder and build features they don't have - so that when I launch our site we would one-up them. Now I feel like I was wrong. I should have launched months ago and done more customer development to make sure I'm not building something people won't care about. Somehow it is so difficult for me to release something that is not perfect. I can hear Gary V. telling me to "quit the bitch train" and launch already. At this point I have three competitors; gdgt, Blippy and Swipely. They've got big launches with lots of PR attention and now getting traction while I'm losing my time pixel by pixel. I guess I'm scared of failing and don't want to launch because of that - or I'm trying to pull a Steve Jobs with the resources of a non-VC backed startup. Should I just take my time and release when I'm happy about my product and not care about my competitors getting traction - or should I hurry to get in the market to get my piece of the pie asap? Your thoughts are appreciated :) |
Don't beat yourself up about Blippy, gdgt, and Swipely. What did they do right? What did they do wrong? What can you learn from them (and on their dollar)? And -- are they REALLY your competitors?
Two last comments. If your design is on the level of your blog design, you'll be fine. It's really clean with clear and concise messaging. Also, have you considered the widening "products you love" into "things you love?" I'm being selfish, but I'd love to be able to follow new "products" from "things I love," like bands. Forget that last thought :)