Why do most product launches fail even when the product is solid?

Hackernews help me out. I've been watching a lot of talented builders create great products that just don't get traction at launch. The technical execution is solid, but something goes wrong between 'we built it' and 'people are using it.' Agencies want $15k/month and give generic playbooks. Consultants disappear after the strategy session. But I keep seeing the same pattern, founders who are amazing at building are failing not one, sometimes multiple launches. This made me think - what if instead of hiring agencies, you could work directly with someone who's successfully launched a similar product? Or is the problem product, ie it really just ins't a good product (not sure this can always be the case?) Has anyone tried this approach? How did you get to successful launch/traction? did you wing it, hire help, or find someone with launch experience? Curious what's actually worked for people here

2 comments

Having a solid product is important, but very far from the only important thing. That's why you see some bad products achieve success and some good products fail. There are a whole lot of other, equally important, factors such as timing, running a solid business, marketing, etc.

But one that people tend to discount that is just as important is just plain luck. Having a great product improves your odds but is no guarantee of success. It just gets you in the game. Literally everyone I know that has achieved success has a string of failed attempts behind them before they finally hit.

The real key to success is simple: you try again after each failure, applying lessons learned, until the dice come up good for you.

Totally agree on the luck factor, it's humbling how much of it comes down to timing and being in the right place. The persistence part is what got me thinking about this though. Like, if most of us are going to fail multiple times anyway, why not at least fail with someone who's been through it before? The pattern I keep seeing is founders who are incredible builders but treat each launch like their first time (because it usually is). Seems like there's got to be a better way than just grinding through the same mistakes everyone else made and rolling the dice??

Why?

Because people have to know about the product and give a care for it.

In other words, Marketing is hard unless you 1) have a ton of money or 2) get "lucky" (right time/place) 3) have the right network/connections already in place to supercharge the 'launch'.

That is why, IMHO.

That is also why 1) being prolific and 2) very persistent are important for success. (Hence, always be launching.)

They're not buying the product. They're buying what it does for their ego or life. People buy on emotion, in addition to whatever it does for them.

But they have to know it exists, first.

Hence, why Ads / "influence" is such a big biz online.