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> Because business is mostly about sales and marketing and not so much about the product.

That's not been my direct experience.

Actually, very much the opposite for myself and many others I know who are software engineers building their own businesses.

> And unlike as you state, building in general is not necessarily fun

No. I said building in general IS fun. That's my premise ;-)

> If you told me to build a house, I wouldn't necessarily consider that fun, so your initial premise is flawed.

No, that's for you as an individual. Not everyone. Yes, there are many people who find building a house fun. Those statements of mine, they were examples. The point is being missed. Engineers like to build.

There is no flawed premise, only an individual looking for flaws.

> A business in this case also falls into the "not fun" category, again, in general to engineers

Again, that's not been my direct experience nor the experience of other Software Engineers that I know who are building businesses.

Most likely you think it's not fun for you. That doesn't mean it's not fun in general, to engineers. Maybe you've chatted about this, anecdotally, with other Software Engineers, maybe you've read some online threads and it's formed a cognitive bias. That's very typical. I can clearly see it in these very generic statements.

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There is whole world out there for people who like to build (e.g. software engineers) and they can do it on their own terms, by better understanding what it is about building they like. Not what they "think" they like, but what actually drives them. That's harder to figure out. The biggest hurdle that I've experienced / seen is not the thousand and one reasons for why software engineers would hate building a business, but rather the biggest hurdle is their own cognitive bias towards it (force fed via generic, and widely accepted statements such as "business is mostly about sales and marketing and not so much about the product").

I'm sure you'll snap back with why I'm wrong. Maybe even sprinkle in some snark. Making sure to get the last word in. Please indulge yourself.

It's now time for me to get back to having fun building my business as a software engineer :-)



What was your actual point in this conversation? I took it as, "building is fun":

> No. I said building in general IS fun. That's my premise ;-)

Then I disagreed with that saying that building in itself is not necessarily fun, only building certain things is fun for certain people, which you seem to take issue with. I posed a counterfactual statement to your general rule, which means that your general rule cannot be true, as in propositional logic.

> Again, that's not been my direct experience nor the experience of other Software Engineers that I know who are building businesses.

> Most likely you think it's not fun for you. That doesn't mean it's not fun in general, to engineers. Maybe you've chatted about this, anecdotally, with other Software Engineers, maybe you've read some online threads and it's formed a cognitive bias. That's very typical. I can clearly see it in these very generic statements.

I said that in general, regardless of one's anecdotal experience, engineers tend towards building technology rather than business aspects like sales and marketing. Much as you disagree with me on anecdotal evidence, I also disagree with you. Whatever, seems to be a disagreement on principles, we can't convince each other.

But, regardless of our disagreements, please don't make statements like these:

> I'm sure you'll snap back with why I'm wrong. Maybe even sprinkle in some snark. Making sure to get the last word in. Please indulge yourself.

> It's now time for me to get back to having fun building my business as a software engineer :-)

When you engage in discourse, you are not above criticism or disagreement. Don't act holier than thou when someone disagrees with you. It harms the nature of argumentation, especially on fora like HN where it's expected more than other fora.




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