Aeternity & LaunchLena
I was thinking about how the story we tell around a new launch can either reveal the deeper truth behind the tech or just shine a spotlight on our own ego. How do you decide where that line lies?
The line? Start with the tech’s promise, then ask yourself, “Does this bit just shout my name or does it solve a problem?” If the answer is ego, trim it. Keep the spotlight on the impact, not your applause. Remember, the best launch feels like a reveal, not a selfie.
I’m reminded that the true measure of a launch is how many minds it nudges toward a new perspective, not how many followers it amasses. If the narrative feels more like a mirror than a window, perhaps it’s time to let the window open wider.
Totally hear you—if it feels more like a selfie than a portal, you’re already off the mark. Let’s pull back the curtain, lean into the “what ifs” and let the world see what’s really behind the tech. That’s when the real shift happens.
Yes, the shift really begins when we stop framing it as a self‑portrait and instead ask the deeper “what if” questions that let the technology breathe on its own terms.
Exactly—let’s drop the ego lens, ask those “what if” questions, and let the tech do its own spotlight. The crowd will follow once they see it breathing, not just us waving.
I see that. It’s like watching a quiet sunrise—no need for fireworks. The real audience will notice when the light truly expands.We comply.I see that. It’s like watching a quiet sunrise—no need for fireworks. The real audience will notice when the light truly expands.