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Why we picked it This widens the question from data and code to the real issue: what does it mean to build your livelihood on ground you do not own. Frederick draws a sharp line between a thin add-on the platform can copy or crush at will and a thick product that solves a deep enough problem to survive on its own, which is the honest test for anything you build on Airtable, Bubble, or any hosted tool. Read it as a way to reframe your bet, not a rule that says never build on a platform.
Building On Someone Else's Platform
From Medium (Ryan Frederick) by Ryan Frederick 6 minute read
- A thin wrapper that fills an obvious gap is the platform's to take back the moment it wants to; a thick product that owns a hard problem is far harder to displace.
- Platform dependency is a spectrum, not a yes/no, so the real question is how much of your value would survive if the platform changed the rules tomorrow.
- Owning the customer relationship and the core logic, even while renting the infrastructure, is what keeps you in charge of your own business.