Would that depend on the homogenity/diversity of your customer base though?
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Replying to @gsvigruha
For sure. Depends a lot on the type of product. Maybe a better way to say it would be: Your product is not good unless it can be used intuitively by the **25% quartile** user **in your space** the first time they try it.
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Replying to @Molson_Hart
Yeah, it needs to be intuitive for a big enough critical mass of users.
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Replying to @gsvigruha
I would guess that this is a point where american firms are wayyyyyy better than their eastern european counterparts.
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Replying to @Molson_Hart
I was gonna ask if you could please go back in time and explain this to a bunch of people in Hungary so i'd be a millionaire by now.
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Replying to @gsvigruha
lol - you can do it today actually (though the people to whom you'd be explaining this to would be different).
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Replying to @Molson_Hart
Honestly i think its way easier to just partner with people who understand this instead.
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Replying to @gsvigruha
I think so, yeah. I've only ever worked with a single developer in the U.S. (my brother) and he definitely did not know this prior to me having multiple screaming matches wherein I explained this to him.
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Hello dillboy @Trang_Corp
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