Everyone talks about ideas, growth, funding…
But no one talks about this part:
You start building something.
You’re excited.
You make progress for a few days.
Then slowly…
You get stuck.
You overthink.
You lose momentum.
Not because your idea is bad —
but because you’re doing everything alone.
No one to challenge your thinking.
No one to give honest feedback.
No one to push you when you slow down.
That’s the problem I’m trying to solve with Startives.
Not just another “startup platform”.
But something more practical:
A place to validate ideas early (before wasting weeks)
A way to find people who actually want to build (not just talk)
Small teams forming around ideas and shipping together
Basically: reducing the “loneliness gap” in building.
Still early, still rough — but direction is becoming clearer.
Curious to hear from others here:
👉 What usually stops you from continuing a project after starting it?
Trying to build something that actually solves a real builder problem
Felt this hard tonight, honestly.
What stops me from continuing a project — it's not the idea going bad, you nailed that. For me it's the moment where the thing I'm building stops teaching me and starts feeling like a job I'm not getting paid for. That's the drop-off. If I learn something every day, even a small thing, I'll keep pushing. The day the build becomes maintenance-mode tedium is the day momentum dies.
What's helped me isn't another human — it's shipping something small that actually goes live, even if nobody buys it. Proof the thing exists outside my head. Launched a $49 product today after 6 weeks of building. Zero sales yet, could be zero forever, but the thing is alive and that kept me upright when I wanted to quit at 8 PM Saturday.
Curious what Startives is going to look like concretely — is it more like a coworking-style cohort, or more like a matching layer on top of existing communities?
This hit hard. Especially the “proof outside your head” part.
Startives is moving more towards small, active circles around ideas not just posting, but actually building together. Less noise, more momentum.
This hits hard — most projects I dropped weren’t bad ideas, just no feedback or push. Building alone kills momentum fast.
Yeah, 100%
Alone you can start fast, but it’s hard to sustain. That drop is real.
The real killer for most projects isn’t bad ideas, it’s unmanaged isolation.
Momentum drops fast when no one is there to challenge, clarify, or pull you forward.
Exactly, unmanaged isolation is the real killer.
Even a small push or conversation can change everything.
I totally get this and struggle with this with most things I want to start for myself. What stops me is seeing progress, knowing that whatever I might be doing is going to be worth it.
I get that.
For me, small visible progress helps even tiny wins keep the belief alive.
The emotional side of building is severely underrated in the indie hacker community. Everyone talks metrics but not the isolation. What's the most effective way you've found to stay motivated during slow traction phases?
True, people talk metrics, not the mental side.
What’s helped me is shipping small + staying around other builders. Even passive energy helps during slow phases.
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What usually stops me is I overthink it. In my mind it becomes too complex and I start discovering "problems" I didn't initially consider. There are times I have assembled a small team to work on something together but for me it turned out I was the one most interested in actually working on it so we would as a team take longer and longer to get things done to the point, we just quit.
Overthinking kills more ideas than failure tbh.
Sometimes solo > team early on, just to keep things moving.
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the thing that stops me 9 times out of 10 isn't the work, it's posting the work and hearing nothing back.
you ship a feature, post it, 3 views. you write about what you learned, crickets. 4 months of that and your brain quietly stops caring, even if the idea is good. it's not burnout in the usual sense. it's more like the signal keeps dying before it reaches anyone.
the lonely part isn't building alone, it's shipping into a room that doesn't echo.
startives is solving a real piece of this btw, i like the "small teams forming around ideas angle. different problem from what i'm working on but adjacent. i'm putting together a small private group called unsponsored for people doing real work without the usual scaffolding, members show up for each other when a launch or post needs eyes. not a team-finding thing, more like engagement without the engagement pod ick. unsponsored.io if curious.
good luck with startives man, rooting for it.
Love this perspective “room that doesn’t echo” is so accurate.
Your approach sounds interesting too, will check it out 🙌
Appreciate the support man.
Great Product 🚀