Bought agreed.net
How much do you guys think we spent in buying agreed.net? Guess it and we will give free LTD to one user who guess it right.
How much do you guys think we spent in buying agreed.net? Guess it and we will give free LTD to one user who guess it right.
People romanticize building products.
“Just build something great and customers will come.”
No. They don’t.
For the last 1 year, we poured everything into building Kiwiform.
Late nights. Missed weekends. Endless redesigns. Constant bug fixing. Tiny UX details nobody notices unless they’re missing.
We obsessed over every interaction.
We made forms faster. Cleaner. Simpler. Better.
We did SEO.
We improved onboarding.
We rewrote copy 100 times.
We genuinely believe Kiwiform is better than many products already winning in this space.
And yet…
After 3 months of launching, we have only 1 paid customer.
That number hurts more than I can explain.
And what makes it even harder is… this isn’t our first product.
We already have successful products in our portfolio.
We know how this game works.
We know how to build.
We know how to execute.
Which somehow makes the silence around Kiwiform even more painful.
Because effort doesn’t care about your past wins.
The market doesn’t reward you just because you worked hard before.
Every new product starts from zero again.
You start questioning everything.
Was the idea wrong?
Was the timing wrong?
Are we just invisible?
Are we not good enough despite giving everything we had?
Nobody sees the anxiety of checking analytics every morning hoping today is different.
Nobody sees the quiet disappointment when there are no new signups again.
Nobody sees how emotionally draining it is to believe so deeply in something… while the world barely notices it exists.
The hardest lesson we’re learning right now:
A great product means nothing if nobody finds it.
Not quality.
Not clean UX.
Not perfect features.
Not sleepless nights.
Distribution matters. Attention matters. Customers matter.
But even after all this, we are not quitting.
Not now.
Not after giving a year of our life to this dream.
We’ll keep improving.
Keep marketing.
Keep learning.
Keep failing.
Keep showing up every single day until something finally clicks.
Because sometimes the only difference between failure and success is surviving long enough.
If you’re building something and struggling silently too, I just want you to know you’re not alone.
This journey is far harder and lonelier than people on Twitter make it look.
We keep going.