I realized when I posted here that I wanted to be upfront with all the tips not being completely "healthy." I lot of times the think a myopic focus is needed to be able to excel, but also the thing that drives people lonely, insane or sad.
I would say it never goes away. I have built companies, angel invested, ran M&A. Still, I always think I am clueless.
I am starting to view it more as a power. "You cannot learn what you already think you know". Having imposter's syndrome means I always will fight harder to get better.
I agree with you, of course ALL investors prefer companies to "burn out than to fade away."
BUT - at the same time all cultures have their issues. I think the Nordics are "punching above their weight" statistically. But at the same time, we are held back by honestly a fear of "beeing seen."
I have no problem with founders aiming for building stable good lifestyle companies or even consultancy shops. But then they should say that. If they are raising money, then by god they have to play the investor game.
No, I agree. The Nordics is swinging above its weight.
But I think all cultures have their reasons to not create more amazing things. The Nordics have a lot of investors preferring safe returns, and therefore perhaps the same within the entrepreneur communinuty.
I didn't want to write a research post. It was actually a rant turned into a post. I was really tired of asking "so, why are you actually doing this company?".
If you mean "hipster" as in "jumping on a new thing too early and bragging about it" I agree. I totally admit that Chromebooks are not mainstream or usable for all kinds of professions, but I was surprised on the maturity it has gotten to.
True! I still think Linux is superior for people who want to configure their devices more, but I think a vast amount of people live their lives either online or in one of the services which on a Chromebook works well offline. That - and games & media - which I think tablets/phones/consoles are better at. I think Chromebooks seem to have reached a maturity point for "most people".
No, it is that I can't feel that my MBP/Macbook adds enough value to cost 5x plus that the Chromebook actually beats performance of my new Mac quite often.