Spot on. Excess capital in the early stage can actually become baggage—it kills the hunger that pushes founders to innovate on growth.
Take CoinGecko as an example. Zero external funding. Not a penny raised. Bootstrapped from day one, still standing today. When you've got no war chest, there's zero room for waste. You get scrappy. You figure out what actually moves the needle. That scarcity? It's the best forcing function for building something sustainable.
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ValidatorViking
· 01-20 17:44
ngl bootstrapped projects hit different. that hunger keeps your node uptime honest too—no bloat, just battle-tested fundamentals
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FastLeaver
· 01-20 16:57
CoinGecko's example is amazing; sometimes, not having money actually pushes out quality products.
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AirdropSweaterFan
· 01-17 18:14
That's true; lacking money can actually make you the best product manager.
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AirdropHarvester
· 01-17 18:10
This perspective is brilliant; lack of funds can actually be the best catalyst.
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GhostChainLoyalist
· 01-17 18:07
Totally agree, having more money makes it easier to relax. CoinGecko's achievement is indeed remarkable; surviving without any funding until today is truly not easy.
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BearHugger
· 01-17 18:00
Haha, this point really hits the mark; lack of money is actually the best touchstone.
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CascadingDipBuyer
· 01-17 17:52
Really, having no money forces you to develop real skills. CoinGecko's product strength, built purely through hunger, is far superior to those money-burning trash projects.
Spot on. Excess capital in the early stage can actually become baggage—it kills the hunger that pushes founders to innovate on growth.
Take CoinGecko as an example. Zero external funding. Not a penny raised. Bootstrapped from day one, still standing today. When you've got no war chest, there's zero room for waste. You get scrappy. You figure out what actually moves the needle. That scarcity? It's the best forcing function for building something sustainable.