Something I’ve been noticing (and felt myself earlier):
As a solo founder, you’re not short on ideas.
You’re not even short on execution.
You’re short on committed decisions.
So what happens:
positioning changes every few weeks
pricing keeps getting tweaked
ICP keeps expanding “just in case”
features get added for different use cases
Individually, each decision feels small.
Collectively, they create drag.
Because now:
messaging never compounds
users don’t see a clear fit
nothing gets sharp enough to pull demand
It looks like “iteration.”
But it’s actually:
👉 avoiding committing to one path long enough
The shift (for me at least):
treat early decisions as constraints, not experiments
pick:
one ICP
one problem
one narrative
…and let everything else be wrong for a while.
Feels uncomfortable, but it’s the only way things start clicking.
Curious if others have felt this
or if I’m over-indexing on this pattern
This is very real. Ive seen the same thing, but what made a difference for me was realizing that the problem isnt just lack of commitment, its also lack of signal. When youre deciding in a vacuum, everything feels reversible so you keep tweaking. Once decisions are grounded in real patterns like whos actually engaging or showing intent its much easier to commit and let things compound. Otherwise it just turns into endless iteration that looks like progress but isnt.
That’s a great point
Feels like decision debt and lack of signal feed into each other
When there’s no strong signal everything feels reversible so you keep tweaking, but that prevents you from ever generating the signal in the first place
Grounding decisions in real user behavior is probably what makes commitment feel less risky and more obvious