After lots of introspection and sleepless nights, we’ve decided to put Grinnit on a permanent hiatus.
We thought the best way to seek closure would be to share our story with the world.
We’re going to lay out our lessons learned with Grinnit, in hopes that others in the startup community working on bringing their passions to market can use our “folding” as a means of self-reflection.
For all of you toiling away, across the street from the graveyard, let’s chat. Self doubt is a natural part of this journey. A need to ‘change the world’ gets you only so far. An irregular, and often irrational, notion of invincibility often leads you down a rabbit hole. You can’t turn around, so you keep burrowing.
Take 5 minutes and read below. Sound familiar? Then take another 10 minutes to take a walk and reflect.
Know your competition well without letting it cloud your judgement or distract you. It’s important to know your market inside and out, and how your product is/will be positioned. In the photo space, and more specifically photo collaboration, we saw competitors quickly emerge since we started down this path in October. Each approaches solving photo collaboration differently, and each brings about a new problem: photo noise.
When we first started Grinnit (then called Invizual), we wanted to solve a costly collaboration problem for businesses that rely on photographic information from distributed teams. We kept it LEAN, and through customer discovery and pre-sales evaluations, realized we were solving a problem for a relatively small market that required costly client acquisition and retention costs.
With the help of our new colleagues in the MassChallenge companies, we realized we had the capability to solve a much larger perceived problem of gathering and organizing photos from a group of people near and far, but focused around a common event or theme - and Grinnit was born.
Some might call it a “Pivot” but we called it “listening to smart people and trying to solve their larger problems.”
And we did it. Grinnit’s Alpha software got everyone’s photos together, whether taken with our smartphone app or a DSLR, and put them in one place and organized them. Problem solved.
What we realized, through our experiments and use of the projects by our emerging competition, is that this then raises a few new issues:
On January 20th, we drafted founders agreements that detailed our commitments to one another and accomplishments we felt were necessary for success, and a pledge to re-evaluate in 6 months - which was Monday, June 20th. We hit many of our milestones and commitments, but there were many pieces of the puzzle missing. Sure, we could have overlooked them, but it would have been a disservice to each other and those that supported us.
None of our founding team had ever completed the crash course within a consumer web startup. Much of our journey was spent better understanding user behavior and coming up to speed in a highly competitive, quickly evolving space. We ultimately came to the conclusion that our weaknesses coupled with a few constraints would hinder our ability to 1) successfully compete and 2) win within the market. Believe us, we like to win, but know when to pull our bets from the table. That brings us to…
Poker players call it Pot Committed: it’s psychologically easier to keep your hand if you’re financially/personally vested, than to fold. You’re not willing to cut the cord, hoping an unforseen circumstance will rekindle the magic. Pot Committed players almost always lose big. In the end, stick to your gut before you’re belly up.
Maybe you’ve never been in this situation, but maybe you know someone that is.
Spread. The. Word.
Help others in a similar situation.
By all means, don’t let our story dissuade you from pursuing your dreams - just take a mature look at whether it’s worth the sacrifice you’re making.
If you want to talk, DM us on Twitter @grinnit. If you’re in Boston, tell us your story over a beer, we’d like to hear it.
Sincerely,
The Grinnit Guys