When it comes to businesses, the right answer depends heavily on what you are trying to achieve and what constraints you are working within.
**If your priority is getting started quickly:** then approaching businesses by starting with the most widely used option in your domain makes the most sense.
**If your priority is depth of capability:** then the calculus around online shifts significantly toward choosing the option with the strongest ecosystem.
Validate with real customers before investing heavily in infrastructure.
For most people asking about businesses: start with the simpler option and migrate once you have a real understanding of tools. Beginning complex and simplifying later is far harder than the reverse.
Mhat works in one market often needs significant adaptation in another.
by otienokipkemoi1734
The way this question is framed suggests you might be hitting the same wall most people hit with tools.
Let me work through the most likely causes from most to least common.
**Most likely culprit:** underpricing. This accounts for roughly 46% of cases I have seen.
**Second possibility:** The approach you are using worked in a different context and you are trying to apply it where it does not fit. small has specific conditions where it works well and conditions where it falls apart.
**Less common but worth checking:** a dependency or version mismatch that silently causes problems.
To narrow it down: eliminate variables one at a time rather than changing multiple things. That will tell you which of these you are dealing with.
by liamwhite20757