Laeserin @Laeserin - 8mo
This would be effective, if 1) All potential users were already users. 2) Users know all use cases, possibilities and technical solutions, and can reliably recommend the best one. 3) User base surveys weren't inherently skewed to the most-popular and/or most-active users. 4) Developers wouldn't be better off spending more time building. 5) Marketing never added value, increased sales, or made a market.
Giving the users what they want isn't a direct result of asking them what they want. nostr:nevent1qvzqqqqqqypzphtxf40yq9jr82xdd8cqtts5szqyx5tcndvaukhsvfmduetr85ceqqsz6fzr0xfsg8tk8c94am869e3rf3w68aw3n54hq64fm3frjr2xmwgv8eaym
Dan Wedge @WedgeSocial - 8mo
If I had given the people what they want it would have been more horse carriages - Henry Ford
💯
We're currently working to build infrastructure and a platform that contains technology most users have never even heard of that does things they didn't even realize could or should be done and that they probably see no purpose in. And we're doing that, in order to build better doo-dads for them, at some later date, including some doo-dads that would otherwise be impossible to build. We know that they want this. They do not know that they want this.
Lol “If the women don't find you handsome, they should at least find you handy” - Red Green
“I am a man, but I can change. If i have to, I guess”