The average lifespan of a digital enterprise in the current attention economy is exactly before the initial capital runs dry or the founders lose interest in the grind. We tend to believe that the speed of innovation is the primary indicator of a platform’s health.
But the reality is that the more a system is unproven by the weight of years, the more it leans on the fragility of its own marketing hype – even though that hype is often a thin veil designed to obscure a lack of fundamental liquidity.
The staggering gap between modern “hype” platforms and established institutions.
I watched a man steal a parking spot this morning. I had my blinker on, waiting for a silver sedan to back out, and this kid in a matte-wrapped hatchback just zipped in from the opposite lane, eyes fixed forward as if the physical space belonged to him by right of audacity.
It left a bitter taste, not just because of the inconvenience, but because of the sheer lack of awareness for established sequence. It reminded me of how the digital world operates now. Everyone wants the front-row seat without having waited in the queue. Everyone wants the high-stakes payout without checking if the house
