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by enoren 6052 days ago
"I also agree with this tweet from Dustin Curtis: ”I have never heard an entrepreneur say ‘I wish I had launched my product later.’”"

I am sure Cuil would disagree with this, however their problem was more mass marketing too early and having too big of an audience for their effectively Alpha release.

2 comments

> I am sure Cuil would disagree with this

That assumes that a later release of Cuil would have done any better. My assumption is that an even buggier release much earlier would have indicated that there was no market for what they were offering, and saved their investors $x million dollars.

Certainly whatever improvements they've done haven't moved the needle on their visitors: http://siteanalytics.compete.com/cuil.com/

If it was a case that the bugginess of the alpha put people off, you'd expect an initial spike, then a slump, then a rising slope as new visitors stuck with the improved post-alpha product. Instead it's just been a downward slope.

There's a ton of products that failed because the markt wasn't ready for them. Segway, anyone?
There's a subtle but important difference between "the market isn't ready" and "there is no market".
Yes, the market wasn't ready for a scooter that costs as much as a used car, has no storage capacity, barely has enough range for a short commute, and can only be used on sidewalks. For the cost of a segway I could buy a racing bicycle made entirely out of carbon fiber. Or, for half the price of a segway I could buy a very high quality commuter bike and a motorized scooter that I could drive on the road, I'd have more options, be able to travel faster and farther (with either the bike or the scooter), be able to carry things, get some exercise, and still have enough cash left over for a 40 inch 1080p LCD.

Segways never made sense as a practical means of transportation.