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A founder I know spent six months building a Chrome extension. Every week, he posted updates. Feature screenshots. Tech stack decisions. Pricing experiments. His audience grew. People loved it.

Then someone launched the same product. Same features. Better design. Faster execution. They'd been watching.

Building in public works. It creates trust, attracts early users, and turns strangers into supporters. But there's a side effect: you're training people to replicate what you're doing.

The Transparency Timeline

Month 1–3

You share everything. Audience grows.

Month 4–6

Competitors watch quietly. Take notes.

Month 7–9

They build. Faster. Using your playbook.

Month 10+

They launch. You realize too late.

Why transparency feels like the right move

When you share your journey, you prove you're real. Showing the messy middle makes people root for you in ways a polished launch never will.

It also forces accountability. Public commitments are harder to abandon. And the feedback you get while building helps you course-correct before wasting months on the wrong direction.

For builders without a network or budget, building in public is one of the few ways to create momentum from nothing.

Moving fast sometimes means hiring outside your timezone. Deel sorts out international payments and contracts so you're not stuck in paperwork while competitors ship. Try Deel

AI in HR? It’s happening now.

Deel's free 2026 trends report cuts through all the hype and lays out what HR teams can really expect in 2026. You’ll learn about the shifts happening now, the skill gaps you can't ignore, and resilience strategies that aren't just buzzwords. Plus you’ll get a practical toolkit that helps you implement it all without another costly and time-consuming transformation project.

The problem starts quietly

You share your pricing model. Someone uses it as their starting point.

You explain which tools you're using and why. Someone skips your research phase and copies your stack.

You document a growth tactic that worked. Someone with more resources runs the same play faster.

Early on, this doesn't feel like a threat. You're too small to worry about. But the gap between sharing your process and watching it used against you is shorter than you think.

The people following aren't always cheering. Some are taking notes.

What competitors see that you don't

When you build in public, you're publishing a roadmap. Not just of what you're building, but how you think, where you're headed, and what's working.

Competitors don't need to guess your next move. You told them. They don't need to test pricing. You did it for them. They don't need to figure out positioning. You showed them what resonates.

They skip the expensive part (the trial and error) and go straight to execution. And if they have more time, money, or speed, they don't just copy you. They beat you with your own playbook.

Some things shouldn't be public. Leventa offers simple legal docs for NDAs and contractor agreements when you need to protect what matters. Try Levanta

Pay for Results, Stop Paying for Traffic

Your problem isn’t traffic, it’s paying for useless clicks that never convert.

Levanta helps Amazon sellers shift from ad spend to performance based affiliate marketing so you only pay when a sale happens.

The reframe: intentional transparency

This doesn't mean stop sharing. It means share selectively.

Talk about the problem you're solving and why it matters. Share lessons and reflections. Show progress without revealing the blueprint.

But keep the details close. Your pricing logic. Your acquisition channels. Your roadmap. The tactics that give you an edge.

Transparency isn't binary. You control how much you reveal and when.

Building in public works best when it builds your audience without handing someone else the manual to outrun you.

Safe to Share

Problems you're solving
Lessons learned
Your "why"
Progress milestones

Keep Close

Pricing strategy
Growth channels
Product roadmap
Tactical advantages

What's worth protecting

I've watched founders share everything, convinced that execution is all that matters. Sometimes they're right. Often, they're giving away the one advantage that bought them time.

Speed isn't equally distributed. Resources aren't either. If someone with both watches you validate an idea, test a market, and prove a model, they don't need to start from zero. They start from your month six.

The version of building in public that wins isn't about radical transparency. It's about knowing the difference between sharing your journey and giving away your map.

"Transparency builds audience. Over-sharing builds competition."

Building takes time. Masterworks lets you invest in art that's historically appreciated while your product finds its footing. It's one way to hedge against all-in risk. Try Masterworks

Dalio: “Stocks Only Look Strong in Dollar Terms.” Here’s a Globally Priced Alternative for Diversification.

Ray Dalio recently reported that much of the S&P 500’s 2025 gains came not from real growth, but from the dollar quietly losing value. Reportedly down 10% last year!

He’s not alone. Several BlackRock, Fidelity, and Bloomberg analysts say to expect further dollar decline in 2026.

So, even when your U.S. assets look “up,” your purchasing power may actually be down.

Which is why many investors are adding globally priced, scarce assets to their portfolios—like art.

Art is traded on a global stage, making it largely resistant to currency swings.

Now, Masterworks is opening access to invest in artworks featuring legends like Banksy, Basquiat, and Picasso as a low-correlation asset class with attractive appreciation historically (1995-2025).*

Masterworks’ 26 sales have yielded annualized net returns like 14.6%, 17.6%, and 17.8%.

They handle the sourcing, storage, and sale. You just click to invest.

Special offer for my subscribers:

*Based on Masterworks data. Investing involves risk. Past performance is not indicative of future returns. Important Reg A disclosures: masterworks.com/cd.

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