Mine once created a reminder for a meeting that didn't exist, then flagged it three days in a row. I only caught it because I kept trying to remember who I was supposed to be meeting.
The interesting part is I still use it for the same task; I've just learned which of its confident moves to double-check. It feels a bit like working with a sharp new hire who's still finding their footing.
When did you first notice your AI agent needed a second look, and did you stop using it or just build a workaround like I did?
We're getting close to launching, and I keep feeling like there are a hundred things we could be doing right now, but probably only five that actually matter.
For those who have launched before:
What were the most important things you did in the final few days?
Which social platforms actually brought people to your launch?
Did X, LinkedIn, Reddit, newsletters, communities, or personal outreach work best?
Was there any small tactic that made a surprisingly big difference?
What's something founders should never do before or during launch day?
Any coding agent gives you a working version of a feature in minutes. Ask again and you get another one, also working, slightly different. Working stopped being the filter.
My rule is simple: I ship the version with the fewest moving parts, because I'm the one debugging it at 2am. Speed of writing means nothing against speed of fixing.
What's your filter? Curious if anyone has a better rule than simplest one wins