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Most hackathon teams lose before they even start coding.
Not because they aren’t smart.
Not because they don’t work hard.
But because they don’t understand how hackathons are actually judged.
After multiple hackathons — wins, losses, finals, and last-minute pitch rewrites — I realized something important:
Hackathons are not coding competitions.
They are compressed product-building simulations.
You are judged on:
• Problem clarity
• Solution relevance
• Execution quality
• Innovation
• Presentation
And here’s what most people get wrong:
They overbuild.
They overscope.
They underestimate the pitch.
They ask mentors vague questions.
They forget that communication is 20% of the score.
Winning teams do the opposite.
They freeze scope early.
They build ONE core feature properly.
They add one strategic “wow factor.”
They rehearse their demo.
They pitch with clarity and confidence.
More hackathons are won in the final presentation than during the 3AM coding sprint.
Comment "guide" for the detailed blueprint on how to win them. I have collated my learnings and I will be happy to send it across!
This Hackathon Mastery Blueprint breaks down:
• How to structure a 30-second elevator pitch
• How to build a balanced team
• How to ship an MVP in 24 hours
• How to ask mentors strategic questions
• How judges actually score projects
• How to network after the event (this is underrated)
If you’re serious about winning — or at least performing at your highest level — this is the framework.
Save this before your next hackathon.
And tag your team.
Let’s build smarter. 🚀
#hackathons #engineering #foryoupage #tech #startup
@chao.tech_










