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This post is part of the Mayfield + DEV Discussion series. Please feel free to go back and answer previous questions as well.
For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse
Cesar Aguirre -
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Top comments (31)
I once started a company about 20 years ago, a startup together with a fellow developer who used to be a carpenter before. We used to focus on interactive web applications using Flash, before changing to e-commerce and search engine optimization. We had a lot of fun and learned a lot, but we could have done better economically. Lessons learned: if you want turn your hobby into a profession, don't forget about money! Team up with a salesperson or get professional economic advice. Also find out about your skills and what makes you happy at work!
After leaving my own company, I became an employee for about the next 10 years. First I was happy not to worry about money, paperwork, and difficult decisions anymore. Later, I started to miss my freedom, especially the freedom to say no, the freedom to chose my customers. Globalization, pandemic, and economic crisis brought a lot of change to our industry, and so did the imminent climate change - at least for me personally. I was one of several people who quit their job (others got laid off) to find alternative vocations offering more purpose and impact.
Currently I don't own a company, but as a freelancer, I grow my network to be able to offer customers full service without relying on conventional freelance project for traditional agencies.
I'm open minded about my professional future, so I might join a collective of other web developers and designers who share ecological and ethical values if they are also fun to work with and share a lot of my implicit values about design and technology.
Man, employment can be so comfortable till you forget your passion and purpose.
Really inspirational. Thinking about freelancing for a while now but well.. here I am still employed. Especially the part with sharing ecological and ethical values I like.
Yeah you are right, this here is a golden advise. Believe me, I learned it hard way, you can still save your time
Thats a great inspirational story @ingosteinke , Thanks for sharing :)
Sometimes I do. But I'm aware it takes so much dedication (it's not as glamorous as social media makes it look). I think having a "one-person business" is more doable and sustainable.
I have seen many people fall for this and failing because of wrong approach. If you are good at coding the product, doesn't mean you can build a successful product. And, people tend to think that they will handle all other aspects from marketing and sales to support, etc. You can't!
So the right approach is to find a great co-founder who have completely different skillset than you, for example someone who is good at sales and marketing.
And then building a good team, for this you need a decent amount of money to at least start, then after successful MVP, you can go for funding or stay bootstraped.
But for this you need to be a different person than you currently are, you have to learn other skills to compliment your leadership and entrepreneur role.
I know, starting a company is the new trend, I have seen genius of coders building trashiest of product and wasting their time.
I'm not saying you're wrong, but even without being a great sales person or marketeer one can bootstrap and run a successful business. As a software consultant/ developer I had enough of building other people's businesses and billing by the hour. I wanted something that would grow by itself, invest my time in something sustainable. I started a site where members place their own content/listing and other members respond, hopefully being able to make a deal. The trick here is the user generated content that creates a feedback loop where more content generates more organic traffic. I can more or less sit by watching member subscription increase. I don't spend a dime on marketing as my users are doing that for me. If you hate marketing and sales, find a way to not need it in the first place.
You are right, many businesses can grow from word of mouth marketing. But, that's also a type of marketing. Marketing is not paying to get an ad slot, it usually starts with the product, its shareablity and whole experience.
Personally, whenever people come to me for marketing consultancy, I see their track record about how much people intaracted and shared. You can always burn the money acquiring customer with money but you can't keep them and make them share.
Nice advice. Realizd my dream is too far off haha
I did, started developing an Application, dropped the idea as it was too complicated for me to build at that time.
The twist is that after 2 weeks, I saw a similar app being launched and gaining popularityπ
Yep. And so I did! theclutch.dev
A JAMstack agency leveraging Nuxt and Storyblok CMS focusing on small/local businesses.
They need affordable custom options too. Not everyone wants a wordpress or wix price, nor can afford a full-house design & development agency.
Literally filed the forms to be a legal entity this morning!
Exciting times ahead
woah good luck running your business! I'm planning to go the same path as well. A software solutions :)
3 times, Once in 2012, once in 2016, and one in 2020.
Out of three, the one I was trying in 2016 was a sass product which I thought would change digital marketing of small brands. It should have been successful, but I then realized that coding a software is much different than running a company. I had no people skills, I miscalculated my fund reserves, I was too focused on making a technically beautiful code, not the features that my end clients needed. A year after I turned off the servers, A friend of mine in digital marketing background pointed it to me that the end clients I assumed would use it, would actually prefers to pay marketing companies to do it for them, I would have been successful If I had targeted marketing companies first instead of focusing on small shopkeepers.
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I did that.
And it's a really fun experience to see what's going on beyond your IDE, to learn a bit about Sales, Marketing, Legal, Accounting, etc.
I even wrote an article about it a few months ago:
12 Extremely Useful Tips for Building a Startup
As developers, I think we're sometimes a bit too self-centered, thinking that we provide the most value for our employer and all the other departments are just one step away from being automated.
Well, yes. In fact, this company exists to date but I'm no longer putting any effort (beyond keeping registered in the local chamber of commerce).
It's a software company. I started it with some pals because we had a prospect that needed a registered company for a project but it never came to live.
I decided to keep and invest some time on it. In 2018, I was jobless and, thankfully, go to clients to work with. It was all freelance work but I took the chance to exercise working for the company. As organized and flexible as possible, being concise in communication, trying to do the best so the company would succeed.
In the end, local clients are very hard to work with because of expectations they have about software building and budget.
It was like an eight month effort. Tons of learning. I'll probably start looking for clients for the company but not soon. I first need to understand a bit more the business side of a company, analyze what went wrong, try to niche it down, and even create a product instead of making custom software (which is VERY complicated).
It's definitively worth it but needs a lot of commitment and sacrifice in the initial months.
every other day. but first of all I really have no Big Ideas for a new startup that would revolutionize any industry
and second, I really love what I do, and find already hard to disconnect. If I had to work for my company, for my baby, I guess I would never stop working ( and die within a year)