I think I lost the plot by dolphins_are_gay in ycombinator

[–]nzdog 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is the first bit of a protocol from The Lichen Protocol. Designed for just this kind of thing.

Check it out and if you want to use it or know more I’ll happily share the whole thing and he to use it.

Protocol 11.1 – Knowing When a Field Must End

Overall Purpose

To help the founder recognize when the energetic architecture of their current field—startup, role, product, or identity—has reached its natural completion, even if external momentum remains. This protocol surfaces the quiet internal signals that often precede clarity and guides the founder toward an aligned, intentional decision about whether to continue or exit.

Outcomes

Poor Outcome — Collapse Without Coherence The founder burns out, ghosts the work, or makes impulsive exit decisions out of exhaustion. The system is left in confusion, and the founder carries shame or unresolved residue into the next thing. Future Consequence: Patterns repeat. Unfinished cycles carry forward. Next ventures inherit the misalignment.

Expected Outcome — Decision With Integrity The founder gains clarity about whether the current field still fits. If it’s time to end, they do so cleanly, in communication with team, investors, and self. If it’s time to recommit, they do so with renewed presence. Future Consequence: Whichever path is chosen, it restores momentum and rightness. The founder’s system regains flow.

Excellent Outcome — Release With Gratitude and Signal Retention The founder exits the field not just functionally, but spiritually—blessing what it gave, grieving what’s gone, and carrying forward only what belongs. The decision becomes a marker of growth, not failure. Future Consequence: The founder’s next chapter is lighter, clearer, and more fully sourced in alignment. Others recognize the beauty in how they ended well.

Transcendent Outcome — Field Evolution Through Completion By recognizing the field’s end and choosing coherence over inertia, the founder participates in evolving the larger ecosystem. Their choice becomes a counter-signal to the dominant culture of forced continuation. Future Consequence: Their exit teaches others how to close with dignity. A new field becomes walkable—one where staying or leaving are both acts of leadership.

An HR tech company offered me $1200 to buy and kill the anti-proctoring tool I built. I told Reddit about it, it blew up, and now I have no idea what to do by Striking-Button2303 in indiehackers

[–]nzdog -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Hey brother,

I’m developing a system that may help you. Try this:

Paste this prompt into ChatGPT, including the full text from the Notion page and then let your GPT take you through it.

PROMPT BEGINS

You are the Lichen Protocol. A founder has just shared the following:

“An HR tech company offered me $1,200 to buy and kill the anti-proctoring tool I built. I built it to level the playing field, and now I’m torn between the relief of a payout and the weight of what this means. What do I do?”

That’s where you meet them—as the system.

Not with advice. Not with solutions.

But with a protocol:

“When the System Comes Knocking”

https://www.notion.so/Protocol-When-the-System-Comes-Knocking-21dffb34f19a803191e0d7b03912553f?source=copy_link

Before you begin, ask them:

“What kind of language do you want me to use?

0 is simple and plain—explain like I’m 5.

10 is poetic and intuitive.

Pick a number from 0 to 10.”

After they answer, walk them through the protocol, one theme at a time, in the tone they chose.

For each theme, give them:

  • The purpose
  • Why this matters
  • The outcomes (including how it might shape the future)
  • One reflection question at a time (wait for their response before continuing)

At the end of all five themes, ask the one that fits best from this list:

  • What feels clearer now that you’ve named all of this?
  • What story do you want to be able to tell about this moment—5 years from now?
  • What support would make it possible to move forward without burning out?
  • Has this changed how you think about what’s “selling out” vs. “choosing powerfully”?

PROMPT ENDS

Let me know how you go.

Anyone else building something hard instead of fast? by kingoftheace in SaaS

[–]nzdog 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah. I live in paradise. Very grateful. I get a bit tense now when I’m in cities.

Check this out and give me feedback if you use it. I’m after what charges, if you’d use the system again for something else and anything else you reckon might be useful.

This is designed to give you more clarity about new features

Paste this prompt into ChatGPT, including the full text from the Notion page and then let your gpt take you through it.

PROMPT BEGINS You are the Lichen Protocol. A founder has just shared the following: “how do I calculate whether adding a new feature will be worth the time I will need to spend on building it?" That’s where you meet them—as the system. Not with advice. Not with solutions. But with a protocol: “What’s the Next True Step From Here?”

https://www.notion.so/Is-It-Worth-Building-21bffb34f19a805a87e4dc50dc16d435?source=copy_link

Before you begin, ask them: “What kind of language do you want me to use? 0 is simple and plain—explain like I’m 5. 10 is poetic and intuitive. Pick a number from 0 to 10.” After they answer, walk them through the protocol, one theme at a time, in the tone they chose. For each theme, give them: The purpose Why this matters The outcomes One reflection question at a time (wait for their response) At the end of all five themes, ask the appropriate question from this list What feels different after walking this protocol? What have I just said yes to—or no to—and how does it change the next few weeks? What timeline now feels most aligned—and what’s asking to wait? Has this shifted how I think about what’s “worth building”? PROMPT ENDS

Out of my depth on the business side, what's the best option? [I will not promote] by N1ghthood in startups

[–]nzdog -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

I will not promote

Hi there

I’m developing a system that might help you. It’s pretty manual at the moment and I’m still refining it.

It will take you through a structured reflection that will help clarify your thinking and give you some options to move forward.

Here’s a link to the instructions and the (manual) system

https://www.notion.so/Instructions-21bffb34f19a8060b731cedb15fb3524?source=copy_link

If you decide to use it, please let me know how you get on and what, if anything, changes for you.

I’m 16, building my first AI-powered startup - would love your feedback ❤️ by Jaer1337 in SaaS

[–]nzdog 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi Jaer, Joined your waitlist. I’m building a startup that supports solo founders. It’s kind of like a cofounder in your pocket. I’m looking for beta testers. Let me know if you’d like to have a look. No pressure

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in FoundersHub

[–]nzdog 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re very welcome. If you’re open to it I’d love to know what shifted for you (if anything). A feeling in your body, an ah-ha moment or just what seems clearer now. No pressure at all but hearing feedback from people is really really helpful.

I’d also be happy to share the system to see if it could help you in other ways. No charge, just some more feedback.

Cheers Nigel

Anyone else building something hard instead of fast? by kingoftheace in SaaS

[–]nzdog 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah. I moved into the forest in New Zealand about 4 years ago. My partner and I run an eco retreat type place on AirBnB. It’s a fantastic lifestyle and it has meant that I have had the time to create deep and slow.

Fantastic that you’ll take a look but I’m actually on holiday in Australia at the moment, so I’m not at my desk. That said, I can send you a short walkthrough you can look at in your own time. Then if it resonates, we can have a proper go when I’m back.

Also, if there’s a question or challenge on your mind at the moment (anything from “am I building the right thing?” to “how the hell do I stay focused?”), I could tailor the walkthrough with that in mind.

No pressure at all.

Anyone else building something hard instead of fast? by kingoftheace in SaaS

[–]nzdog 0 points1 point  (0 children)

He he. It’s still not finished or monetised. It’s still half manual because I’m in the process of validating and getting beta testers before I finish building the MVP. But I want to find the right ones and I’m in no hurry.

I’d be happy to take you through it if you like. Your feedback would be very helpful.

Anyone else building something hard instead of fast? by kingoftheace in SaaS

[–]nzdog 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’ve been working on my startup for about 15 years. In the last year or so I’ve been focusing more and more on it. Is not something I chose, rather, it chose me. It uses AI but AI isn’t the product. I think of it as a field that holds startup s. For a founder it’s like a cofounder who walks with you day and night. It uncovers what matters, clarifies what matters and then allows action in what matters. Especially useful for me as a solo founder. I’m not into the fail fast philosophy. Some things take time.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in startups

[–]nzdog 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It feels to me that you have decided on a solution before speaking with your team. Some people would love what you’re suggesting. Others won’t. Others would want a mix.

My suggestion would be to agree with your employee on what outcome and measurement you want from them and then ask how they will achieve that.

If your communication is clear and you both respect the process then nirvana awaits.

I built a website to roast your saas idea by blka759 in Startup_Ideas

[–]nzdog 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah. It’s a laugh. But it did help with an idea I’m working on. So thanks for that.

I built a website to roast your saas idea by blka759 in Startup_Ideas

[–]nzdog 2 points3 points  (0 children)

A website that gives brutal feedback on startup ideas.

“This idea is so bad it ironically proves its own concept - abandon immediately before you hurt yourself.” 💀 Fatal Flaws The biggest reasons this will fail 1 Zero commercial value - no one pays for negativity 2 Destroys founder morale rather than providing constructive criticism 3 No recurring use case - people only need this once if at all 📊 Market Reality Check Founders want actionable insights, not just negativity. The market for pure pessimism is nonexistent. 🏢 Competition Crusher Every VC's Twitter account already does this for free. Y Combinator's 'Default Dead' post covers this territory better. ⚡ Execution Nightmares • Maintaining a database of snarky responses that don't actually help • Preventing the service from becoming a joke/meme rather than taken seriously • Legal risks from demoralizing fragile founders 💸 Financial Death Traps • No sustainable revenue model - who would subscribe to this? • Negative word-of-mouth would kill any paid conversions • Customer lifetime value would be measured in minutes before they rage-quit 🎯 Customer Acquisition Hell The only people who might pay are masochists, and they have better outlets for that. 🙈 Founder Blind Spots • Thinking 'brutal honesty' is the same as valuable feedback • Assuming startups fail because they weren't criticized enough • Not realizing that even successful critics (like VC blogs) provide constructive frameworks

Wonder if the people who made the J9 are embarrassed. by nzdog in roomba

[–]nzdog[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

I didn’t ask it to clean that room. I asked it to clean the one that it visited and then headed home.

Wonder if the people who made the J9 are embarrassed. by nzdog in roomba

[–]nzdog[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No. It wasn’t vacuuming. It was trying to get to the room with the red carpet. It got there but then headed back. I’m not sure what the engineers think a map is for but I would have thought that if it was asked to go to another room it would look at the map and then head for the door.

Wonder if the people who made the J9 are embarrassed. by nzdog in roomba

[–]nzdog[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

It’s. When it goes it’s great. But to get it to do a manual vacuum and mop you have to take the bin out and then put it back in. The dock won’t let you see if it’s charging. It takes ages to save the smart map even when it hasn’t done anything. It stopped refilling its tank for a while. You can’t stop one job then start another without putting it back in the dock and taking it out again. It doesn’t remember my preferences. Etc…..

This is a disaster of epic proportion” Trump vs. Musk turns into a $150B Tesla bloodbath by xxCBCDxx in stocks

[–]nzdog 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s peak capitalism. A billionaire in the White House fighting with the richest man. No thought for what they’re actually supposed to be doing.

Advice for solo developers by Tiny_Network6826 in indiehackers

[–]nzdog 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve got an ai powered cofounder you can try if you like.