No product. No traction. Just a vision.
I shared one of my past projects, which was enough to get the work started.
Soon after, I started working with him to bring that idea to life with my teammate/friend.
We built the app from scratch. That MVP eventually scaled to process over $5M+ (something I’m still proud of).
The company raised funding. On paper, my 1% stake started to mean something. Things felt like they were working.
Then things changed.
A new CTO came in, a great guy who taught me CLI & Linux (grateful for that). But I moved from working directly with the founder to working under a new structure.
Less ownership. Less direct communication. More layers.
At the same time, the company started missing its marketing targets. Growth slowed. Burn continued.
In January 2026, I was asked to stop working. By March, even my teammate who was still supporting the mobile app with the CTO, was also asked to stop.
Eventually, the company ran out of money.
We’re still helping a bit on the marketing side now as we want this to work.
That experience taught me a few things:
- Building is only half the game, distribution decides survival
- Proximity to decision-makers matters more than you think
Still grateful I went through it.
----------- Mainly, I only post here about my product or ask something. This time I just share my x post here to share one of the learnings.
If you didn’t, you can write like a human here.
No need to make every line a slogan.
Still I am grateful for this opportunity to spread my knowledge.
Onwards and upwards to the next comment section.
I had a similar story. I was hired as the first engineer after a mobile agency had built native (iOS/Android) mobile apps.
I built a React web app to support scaling, rewrote the mobile app in React Native to ship faster, and built a ton of features.
We went from 0 revenue to 100k+ ARR, and I got 5% of the company on paper. Then, I hired a small team, and the company scaled to 10M ARR.
I left the company because I had a disagreement with the founder. Today, it is probably doing 20M in ARR, and my 5% (which I still have on paper) has never turned a dollar for me.
Right now, it's totally dependent on how the founder takes the call. I am trying my bit, but as I'm way away from marketing right now, I have no clue.