u/Busy-Reserve9416

▲ 48 r/NSEbets

Guys, I know most people here are going to relate to this. One day you make a profit and this goes on for a week, then one day you lose your entire capital. You then think, "I don't want to continue trading all I want is to get my money back." And from here, the ultimate disaster comes into the picture. You end up making quite a bit of money over the next few weeks, then blow up your account, fall into grief, and after some time come back to the market hoping to recover the money. This cycle goes on, and a loss of ₹10k turns into ₹10 lakh. Your mental health gets destroyed, your prime years vanish, you become mentally exhausted, and most importantly, you are always filled with guilt. But it can all stop if you understand one thing the only way to make good money in the market is not through trading, but through value investing. So please make this thread go viral and don't let more young people destroy their lives and fall into this trap.

Please do share your journey of how trading has ruined your life, and promise yourself today that you will deactivate your futures and options segment and never trade again.

Please help people get a reality check. Share your journey in this format:

- Your age

- Your income

- Your total profit and loss

- How long you have been trading

- And if you got a chance to go back to when you started trading, would you still choose this path?

reddit.com
u/Busy-Reserve9416 — 13 days ago

I keep seeing this over and over.

Founder builds something genuinely useful. Like actually spent months solving a real problem. But their landing page reads like every other SaaS landing page. Their ads aren't converting. They're posting on LinkedIn and getting nothing back. And slowly they start thinking maybe the product just isn't good enough.

It's not the product.

I've looked at enough of these to know most of the time the product is fine. What's broken is the gap between what you built and how you're explaining it to the people who actually need it. Your messaging is talking to everyone which means it's talking to no one.

I'm a marketing consultant, I'm 20, and I specifically work with SaaS founders on this exact problem. Getting clear on who your real customer is, what actually makes them pay attention, and how to reach them without burning money on channels that were never right for your audience anyway.

This isn't a "here's your strategy doc, good luck" situation. I actually want to see it work.

I'm taking on a few founders right now. If your product has real users who love it but growth feels like pushing a boulder drop a comment or DM me. Tell me what you're building.

I'll give you my honest take. No weird sales process, I promise.

reddit.com
u/Busy-Reserve9416 — 14 days ago

I keep seeing this over and over.

Founder builds something genuinely useful. Like actually spent months solving a real problem. But their landing page reads like every other SaaS landing page. Their ads aren't converting. They're posting on LinkedIn and getting nothing back. And slowly they start thinking maybe the product just isn't good enough.

It's not the product.

I've looked at enough of these to know most of the time the product is fine. What's broken is the gap between what you built and how you're explaining it to the people who actually need it. Your messaging is talking to everyone which means it's talking to no one.

I'm a marketing consultant, I'm 20, and I specifically work with SaaS founders on this exact problem. Getting clear on who your real customer is, what actually makes them pay attention, and how to reach them without burning money on channels that were never right for your audience anyway.

This isn't a "here's your strategy doc, good luck" situation. I actually want to see it work.

I'm taking on a few founders right now. If your product has real users who love it but growth feels like pushing a boulder drop a comment or DM me. Tell me what you're building.

I'll give you my honest take. No weird sales process, I promise.

reddit.com
u/Busy-Reserve9416 — 14 days ago
▲ 2 r/SaaS

I keep seeing this over and over.

Founder builds something genuinely useful. Like actually spent months solving a real problem. But their landing page reads like every other SaaS landing page. Their ads aren't converting. They're posting on LinkedIn and getting nothing back. And slowly they start thinking maybe the product just isn't good enough.

It's not the product.

I've looked at enough of these to know most of the time the product is fine. What's broken is the gap between what you built and how you're explaining it to the people who actually need it. Your messaging is talking to everyone which means it's talking to no one.

I'm a marketing consultant, I'm 20, and I specifically work with SaaS founders on this exact problem. Getting clear on who your real customer is, what actually makes them pay attention, and how to reach them without burning money on channels that were never right for your audience anyway.

This isn't a "here's your strategy doc, good luck" situation. I actually want to see it work.

I'm taking on a few founders right now. If your product has real users who love it but growth feels like pushing a boulder drop a comment or DM me. Tell me what you're building.

I'll give you my honest take. No weird sales process, I promise.

reddit.com
u/Busy-Reserve9416 — 14 days ago