I built a small thing ๐https://t.co/nhP9cuWaAi
A simple, free tool to make charts from CSV data. All chart makers on Google first page were old or needed an account to work, so thought I could do better
Any feedback welcome and I will turn into new features! #buildinpublic
@rikschennink congrats man! not that slow... has taken me similar amount of time to get to $500. Really big milestone, for me at least it feels like from there you have a playbook to get to 3-5k if you just execute consistently
Finally automated my flow for blocking accounts that churn...
Shows that you really can go a long way with manual processes. Don't waste time at the beginning overengineering for scale you don't have yet.
Just did an updated comparison on @ghost vs @WordPress.
In short:
- Simplest sites -> WordPress
- More complicated -> Ghost
- Most complicated -> WordPress
Full post here ๐https://t.co/TOr1fEfFOC
I've had to work part-time and really flexibly the last few weeks. It's tough knowing that I can't grow my business as much as I want, but that flexibility is the reason that I went solo in the first place - always good to remind myself of that!
Any other @IndieHackers out there trying to give back somehow through their business?
I just started open sourcing more of my code and I have been doing pro-bono projects here and there for a while.
What else are people doing?
Recently changed my About page. I find it difficult as a solo entrepreneur to get the right balance of professional vs. up-front about being a small business.
https://t.co/iWkbTSi4xC
Many people will tell you to avoid selling products that are too cheap, but:
- a cheap product is quick to build
- can get you lots of users
- and based on their feedback, you can add features that people will pay more for
My Free Chart Maker is now open source. Should be some good examples in there for anyone building charts in @reactjs and @GatsbyJS.
Tutorials coming soon.
Code here: https://t.co/kAHH7BNlZu
My Data Studio connector for Plausible Analytics is now getting more signups than my Mailchimp connector.
I guess this might tell you something about the trajectory of these two companies?
I see lots of @IndieHackers discussing what's better:
- Build 10 different startups for diversification
- Or 1 startup for focus
My compromise: build multiple small products under the same brand.
This way you can still build new things, but not start from 0 every time.
@DamianSkotzke@yongfook@bannerbearHQ Thanks! it's a bit of both - plus since I'm happy to share, it gives me a few more topics to talk about for content
My open company page is now live! ๐ I always said that I would start one if I made it to $500 MRR, so here it is.
Credit to @yongfook, I took a lot of inspiration from his Open Startup page at @bannerbearHQ.
The startup advice I find myself giving more and more:
Take all of the ideas you have in your head of different directions you can go, pick the one that you can do the quickest and easiest and just do that and see what happens.