in ,

The Truth about Creating a Startup

startup-board
startup-board

Hard Truths and Hollow Dreams

Alright, listen up, future streamers, game developers, and indie startup hopefuls. You’ve heard the success stories, the rags-to-riches tales that inspire you to “follow your dreams” and quit your day job because your big break is “just around the corner.” But here’s the thing—those stories are the exceptions, not the rule. And unless you’ve got a big wallet or a wealthy backer, the hard truth is, your dream of “making it” is like walking a tightrope over a pit of burnout and financial ruin.

Hard Work Is the Tool, Not the Outcome

Let’s get one thing straight: hard work doesn’t guarantee success. You could pour a thousand hours into a game, a YouTube channel, or a streaming setup, and guess what? No one’s obligated to care. The harsh truth is that the market is a lottery. Yes, hard work might get you the tools—skills, portfolio, assets—but it doesn’t give you the spotlight.

Take a page from Terry Crews’s book. He showed up on the set of Training Day, just hanging around, hoping to learn. Then, by sheer luck, the director noticed him and asked if he wanted to be in a scene. He didn’t get paid for it, but that exposure led to bigger things. Crews didn’t bank on the opportunity; he was prepared when it popped up.

For the rest of us mortals, it’s like putting out a candle in the middle of a stadium and hoping the crowd will come find the light.

Viral Moments: Money or Miracles

Let’s talk about going viral, that elusive pot of gold everyone seems to be chasing. Here’s the reality: either you’ve got a hefty marketing budget, or you’re waiting for a miracle. Those videos, games, or products that “go viral” without major money behind them? They’re flukes. Random as a coin toss. Unless you’ve got someone influential sharing your content or playing your game, that hard work might as well be invisible.

You want to drop everything and focus on building a game or a stream? Fine, but don’t go in blind. The burnout is real. People are burning their savings, blowing their retirement funds, all for a shot in the dark. Your passion project won’t pay your rent.

Some Pillars of Success (If You Can Call It That)

If you still think you’ve got what it takes, then here’s what it actually takes to up your odds:

  1. A Massive Social Media Following: This isn’t optional. In today’s world, your follower count is currency. A massive following is the difference between a whisper in a void and a roar heard around the world. If you’re not starting with that, you’re already playing on hard mode.

  2. Connections with Investors and Industry Giants: Money moves mountains. If you’ve worked with investors or movers and shakers in the industry before, great. If not, start networking yesterday, because nobody’s investing in “the unknown dev with a passion for pixel art.”

  3. A Loyal Customer Base: If you’ve had a successful product or game before, fantastic. Those fans are your first players, buyers, stream viewers—free advertising that can make or break your launch. If you don’t have this, start building it. Slowly, smartly.

For the Other 99%: A Safety Net, a Side Hustle, and a Reality Check

working-late

The world doesn’t owe you a viral moment. So, while you’re building your passion project, build a safety net first. Keep a stable income, don’t gamble the house, and don’t blow your savings. This is a cautionary tale as much as it’s a reality check: the chance that a startup will fail is the most probable outcome. That’s not pessimism—that’s statistics.

So be strategic. You don’t want to be the person saying, “I left my job to be a YouTuber” and find yourself moving back home because the ad revenue didn’t cover your car payment. Yes, dreams are worth pursuing, but not at the cost of your financial stability and mental health.

Success isn’t some cosmic right—it’s a cocktail of skills, timing, luck, and yes, a dose of financial backing. Keep grinding, but remember: it’s not just your hard work that matters. It’s the luck that finds you along the way.

What do you think?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

big-ai-brother-1984

Arriving Now: AI Police, trained by Google

robots-lots-overseer

AI Isn’t Taking Your Job; It Will Empower Your Coworker To Do It Instead