Fifty-two steps in, you have shipped more than most people who ever say they want to build something. You talked to users. You launched a product. You found customers. You made money. You hired help. You learned what works and what does not. That is not small. That is the whole game played at least once.
Now sit down and write it out. Not for marketing. For you. The act of writing forces you to name the lessons before you carry them into the next 90 days.
Open a blank Notion page. Set a 60-minute timer. Answer five questions in order — short, honest, no editing on the first pass.
- What did you ship? List the things, not the feelings. Product, customers, revenue, hires, integrations.
- What surprised you? The thing you did not expect to be hard. The thing that turned out easier than you feared.
- What was harder than you expected? Name it directly. This is where the real lessons hide.
- What would you do differently? Be specific. "Talk to users earlier" is vague. "Run five interviews before writing any code" is useful.
- What are your three priorities for the next 90 days? Three. Not ten. Pick.
Then go back and edit. Cut anything that is not true. Keep anything that would help another founder one step behind you.
The difference between a letter that sits in a drawer and one that changes your next quarter is specificity.
Bad: "I learned that customers matter and I should listen more."
Good: "I learned that the three users who emailed me unprompted in week 12 told me more than the 40 survey responses combined. Next quarter I am scheduling one user call every week."
Vague reflections produce vague plans. Specific lessons produce specific moves.
- Treating reflection as a waste of time. The best founders write — that is not a coincidence.
- Writing only the wins. The losses are where the lessons live. Include both.
- Listing ten priorities for the next 90 days. Ten is zero. Pick three.
Block 90 minutes. Answer the five questions. Name your three priorities for the next 90 days. Share the letter with your community on 52Waypoint, or keep it private — your call.
A written founder letter covering what you shipped, what surprised you, what was hard, what you would do differently, and three concrete priorities for the next 90 days. Saved somewhere you will read it again in three months.
Fifty-two steps in, you have shipped more than most people who ever say they want to build something. You talked to users. You launched a product. You found customers. You made money. You hired help. You learned what works and what does not. That is not small. That is the whole game played at least once.
Now sit down and write it out. Not for marketing. For you. The act of writing forces you to name the lessons before you carry them into the next 90 days.
Open a blank Notion page. Set a 60-minute timer. Answer five questions in order — short, honest, no editing on the first pass.
- What did you ship? List the things, not the feelings. Product, customers, revenue, hires, integrations.
- What surprised you? The thing you did not expect to be hard. The thing that turned out easier than you feared.
- What was harder than you expected? Name it directly. This is where the real lessons hide.
- What would you do differently? Be specific. "Talk to users earlier" is vague. "Run five interviews before writing any code" is useful.
- What are your three priorities for the next 90 days? Three. Not ten. Pick.
Then go back and edit. Cut anything that is not true. Keep anything that would help another founder one step behind you.
The difference between a letter that sits in a drawer and one that changes your next quarter is specificity.
Bad: "I learned that customers matter and I should listen more."
Good: "I learned that the three users who emailed me unprompted in week 12 told me more than the 40 survey responses combined. Next quarter I am scheduling one user call every week."
Vague reflections produce vague plans. Specific lessons produce specific moves.
- Treating reflection as a waste of time. The best founders write — that is not a coincidence.
- Writing only the wins. The losses are where the lessons live. Include both.
- Listing ten priorities for the next 90 days. Ten is zero. Pick three.
Block 90 minutes. Answer the five questions. Name your three priorities for the next 90 days. Share the letter with your community on 52Waypoint, or keep it private — your call.
A written founder letter covering what you shipped, what surprised you, what was hard, what you would do differently, and three concrete priorities for the next 90 days. Saved somewhere you will read it again in three months.