Seven days ago, I gave myself a public challenge: get 100 real users for Deeditt in four months. No paid ads, no hacks .. just me, the product, and the work.
I knew it wouldn't be easy — but I didn’t expect the emotional rollercoaster it would bring.
This isn’t a victory lap. It’s a first checkpoint. And even though the metrics aren't explosive, what I’ve gained might be more important than growth:
Clarity, direction, a new voice.
What Went Well
This week I launched the latest version of Deeditt (v2.1.0) — available now on web and mobile. The update wasn’t flashy, but it was meaningful: tone enhancement, DMs between users, deed sorting from journeys, deed formatting improvements, and key bug fixes. Quiet progress, but real progress.
More importantly, I showed up every day.
I posted on different social networks. I reached out to over 50 people manually, tested different messaging, formats, and platforms.
I published updates, wrote blog posts, answered questions, and engaged with communities. And in that process, I connected with a few thoughtful individuals whose advice will likely shape this entire journey.
But the best win of all?
I stayed honest and vulnerable the whole time. No pretending to “crush it.” Just me, trying to make something meaningful.
What Hurt
The results didn’t match the effort.
Most cold DMs were ignored — lost in request folders or skimmed past.
Some days, it felt like I was shouting into the void.
Social media started to feel less like a community, and more like a stage. A place where people chase attention, not conversation. That realization hit hard — especially for someone building a platform meant for depth, not dopamine.
I also began to doubt myself. Was I saying the wrong thing? Was I too sincere for this format? Maybe people don’t want thoughtful — maybe they want fast.
There was also this nagging invisibility — like Deeditt wasn’t “getting through”. Not because it’s bad… but because it asks more of the reader. It’s subtle. And subtle doesn’t trend.
What I Learned
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Social media ≠ user acquisition. It’s great for presence and storytelling, but not conversion — unless the strategy matches the medium.
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People assume you’re selling something, even when you’re not. That’s the cost of trying to promote a free idea in a commercial world.
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Deeditt isn’t made for everyone — and that’s okay. It’s for those who value long-form reflection and non-performative writing. That group exists — I just need to meet them where they are.
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Writing daily, in a threaded and chronological way, helped build continuity. It’s something I’ll lean into more moving forward.
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Instead of blind outreach, I’m now shifting toward commenting with context, thanks to advice from someone who’s been through similar trenches.
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And perhaps the most unexpected lesson: I’m learning to accept rejection without letting it define me.
The Moments That Changed Me
Something clicked midweek:
“I’m not building a product. I’m defending an idea.”
That changed everything. It reframed my purpose — I’m not just trying to gain traction. I’m trying to build a space for people who value honesty, depth, and growth. That’s not a pitch — it’s a belief.
Another insight came when I realized:
“People use social media to post random thoughts. If they used Deeditt, those thoughts could become journeys.”
Deeditt isn’t trying to replace social media. It’s offering an alternative path — a quieter, more meaningful one. But to get that across, I’ll need to speak the right language… in the right places.
And finally:
“The message may be right. The delivery channel might be wrong.”
That single sentence has me now exploring blogs, slower communities, journaling groups, and deeper thinkers. The ones who don’t scroll past everything.
Week 1 Reflection
This week was filled with effort, fatigue, insight, and redirection.
I didn’t get what I wanted, but I got what I needed.
A clearer map, a stronger voice, a better understanding of where to go next — and how to show up when I get there.
Next week, I continue.
Not blindly. Not performatively, but with intention.
If you’ve read this far, thank you.
And if you’re building something yourself — whether it’s a product, a story, or just a better version of your own life — I hope you find your map too.
Let’s keep going.
🚀 Follow along as I continue this 4-month challenge. Week 2 is already in motion — and everything is still wide open.
If you want to try Deeditt for yourself, it's completely free. No algorithms. No filters. Just what matters: deeditt.com
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Deeditt is a community where real stories —successes, setbacks, choices, and lessons— are documented to inspire, teach, and connect. It’s a space free from filters and performance, where what you’ve lived can help someone else find their way.