deylandra
The project will fail because the name Cgig is not compatible with the language algorithm in humans for a marketplace.
I develop language software, study languages, and my background is in marketing.
How can you so categorically judge the project success by its name? It's only a part of the equation, moreover, you can always rebrand your site.
Arrogant people with inflated self-esteem always amazed me. I checked your projects (https://www.meylandra.com/), and I can say for sure that you don't know a thing about marketing, and "a double vowel EE" is the only interesting thing I spotted across all your websites.
You clearly didn't care to conduct preliminary marketing research with a target audience, or even spend a few hours googling similar projects (step one before starting any business). Otherwise, you would know why countless startups with very similar ideas failed. The projects look like they were crafted in the 90's by some kid, and none of them is functional. It might be sufficient 20 years ago before the dotcom bubble, but it won't work now because all those projects aim to simultaneously disrupt highly-competitive industries โ web search, video streaming, online shopping, food delivery, social networks, even politics and religion.
What would a marketing specialist say about it? Focus on a single product, study your target audience, create a clear product message, describe distinctive features, prepare a few theses to support your claims, hone the wording, hire a talented designer to craft catchy design, make sure that your marketing website is functional and everything is working properly. And only after that try to sell your idea to the end-users.