Entrepreneur
Post LinkedIn lead magnet · Entrepreneurship
Are you building a religion… or a business? Here’s the pattern I keep seeing (and I’ve done it too): Founders are told to “focus on the constraint.” So we do. But if you’re a strong conceptual thinker, you can generate infinite constraints… and solve them beautifully inside your head one after the other. Because our brain hates open loops. If a decision isn’t finished, it keeps running simulations until it “closes” the story. That’s useful… and it’s also how you end up overbuilding a complete belief system on false clarity: - ICP “characters” that feel real (but aren’t validated) - narratives that explain everything - frameworks, values, stories - answers to every objection before anyone even objects It feels like progress. But it’s not the same thing as traction. A business survives by being corrected by reality. A belief system survives by defending internal logic. The giveaway: you can win arguments in your head all day… and still lose in the market. So stop signing and dancing at your own gospel. It feels good in the beginning, but eventually becomes very painful when reality catches up and burns away the financial, physical and emotional ressources you needed to achieve your dream. Here's a simple test.. If you have a prototype and can’t do one of these within the next month, you’re probably building the “religion”: 1. Talk to at least 12 real prospects 2. Ask for money (even a small commitment) 3. Let their reaction rewrite your assumptions Because just like motion isn't momentum, entrepreneurial grit isn’t perseverance It’s adaptive intelligence—and that only shows up in contact with reality. Question: what’s the one assumption you’ve been polishing… instead of testing? #Entrepreneurship P.S. If you want to make better decision under pressure, DM or comment Compass for a special offer.
Mécanisme lead magnet
DM or comment Compass for a special offer.