I've been there. I recommend the book, "The Hard Thing About Hard Things." It got me out.
One of the keys to remember - with tech, unlike a lot of businesses, you're playing 3D chess. Not only do you have lots of moves, but the market shifts, the possibilities shift when new tech is introduced. People always get excited when something like cloud or blockchain appear, but their real value is to companies with an existing customer base like yours who have a large market but hit some barrier in the unit economics and such.
You should probably talk it with your investors too. Zombie companies are bad for VCs, practically as bad as failures.
Selling the company will get some money back. You might be surprised how much you get for it too.
One of the keys to remember - with tech, unlike a lot of businesses, you're playing 3D chess. Not only do you have lots of moves, but the market shifts, the possibilities shift when new tech is introduced. People always get excited when something like cloud or blockchain appear, but their real value is to companies with an existing customer base like yours who have a large market but hit some barrier in the unit economics and such.
You should probably talk it with your investors too. Zombie companies are bad for VCs, practically as bad as failures.
Selling the company will get some money back. You might be surprised how much you get for it too.