The Market Knows More Than You Do

AI, Testing, and Market Validation

The Market Knows More Than You Do AI Just Helps You Find Out Faster

One of the biggest mistakes creators, entrepreneurs, and builders make is believing they know what people want before the market responds.

AI does not remove uncertainty. It helps you test ideas faster.

Over the last 23 years, I’ve built businesses in mobile apps, software, ecommerce, websites, and now AI tools. One lesson has shown up in every business. The market is smarter than I am. Not because I’m unintelligent. Because the market gives feedback. It tells you what people actually want. And most entrepreneurs spend too much time trying to predict the answer instead of listening to it. AI is making that mistake easier than ever. It’s also making it easier to avoid.

I know because I have made that mistake myself.

The lesson keeps repeating: Over the years I have:

• Built 624 mobile apps

• Generated 8 million downloads

• Produced over 6 million YouTube views

• Sold four businesses

• Built websites that reached 180,000 visitors per month

Those numbers sound impressive.

But they all came from the same process:

Test.

Track.

Improve.

Repeat.

The market knows more than you do.

The faster you accept that, the faster you make progress.

The Trap Most People Fall Into

Most people spend months building, planning, tweaking, polishing, and adding features.

Then they launch and wait for validation.

Sometimes it comes. Often it does not.

The problem is not effort.

The problem is that the effort happened before the learning.

The market never got a vote.

Most people think AI is about creating more content.

I think that misses the point.

The real advantage of AI is testing.

Instead of writing one headline, you can generate twenty.

Instead of trying one angle, you can explore ten.

Instead of spending weeks creating something nobody wants, you can get feedback much faster.

One of My Biggest Failures Took Two Years

Years ago, I worked on a mobile game that I genuinely believed could be a major success.

I spent almost two years improving it, refining gameplay, adding features, and trying to make it better.

At one point, a Google employee told me it was better than many of the games in the top charts.

I thought I was onto something.

The market disagreed.

The game never became the success I expected.

That experience taught me something important:

Quality matters. But market demand matters more.

The Winning Idea Is Often Not Your First Idea

Another lesson I learned building hundreds of mobile apps was that my first idea was rarely my best idea.

Sometimes I would release an app expecting it to succeed. It did not.

Then I would make a small change:

  • Different audience
  • Different positioning
  • Different theme
  • Same underlying concept

Suddenly, the result could change.

I once had two runner games. Same company.

Same category.

Same audience.

One made roughly $500/month.

The other made roughly $3,500/month.

I didn’t become seven times smarter.

The market simply preferred one idea over the other.

That lesson changed how I build products.

AI Changes the Speed of Learning

This is where AI becomes powerful.

AI does not eliminate uncertainty.

It reduces the cost of learning.

What We Are Doing Right Now

I am applying the same thinking to Mokool Apps.

I am not trying to perfectly predict what people want.

I am launching tools, watching analytics, testing traffic sources, studying retention, and looking for signals.

Some pages will fail. Some tools will fail. Some ideas will go nowhere.

That is normal.

The goal is not perfection.

The goal is finding signals.

Once you find something that works, you can build on top of it one block at a time.

The Simple Framework

When in doubt:

  • Test the idea.
  • Track the result.
  • Improve what shows promise.
  • Repeat what works.

The market will tell you what matters.

You just need to listen.