Most early-stage founders don’t have a time problem.
They have a clarity problem.
At the beginning, everything feels important. Every idea feels worth exploring. Every opportunity feels like it could be “the one.” Every problem feels urgent.
So you end up:
  • jumping between ideas
  • saying yes to things you’re not sure about
  • working a lot, but not always moving forward
And at the end of the day, you’re busy but not clear on what actually mattered.
This isn’t a discipline issue.
It’s what happens when you’re building without clear filters yet.
How can you shift out of this?
Start getting honest about:
  • What problem you actually want to solve
  • Who you want to solve it for
  • What’s not worth your time right now
Once that’s clear, things start to feel less chaotic and more intentional.
What’s something you’ve been saying “yes” to lately that you’re not fully sure about?
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7 comments
Chris Bustos
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Most early-stage founders don’t have a time problem.
THE LATINO STARTUP
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The Latino Startup is a community for Latino founders. We help turn ideas into businesses using LEAN Startup methods and peer support.
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