Short, bite-sized conversations with indie hackers that have started small, profitable and bootstrapped businesses. You'll learn how they come up with ideas, what they do to validate, find those first customers and make a sustainable income. Episodes every Tuesday.
Building and monetizing an audience as a software engineer - Randall Kanna Franson
Today I’m joined by Randall Kanna Franson. Randall is a senior software engineer who has written 3 books, including one published by O’Reilly and a self published one which made over $70k. She also created a course called Hack the Tech interview which made $20k in the first 24 hours and $50k in the first month. All of this has been through Randall’s efforts to share her learnings from almost a decade being a software engineer and growing her twitter audience to over 50,000 followers. She’s also dabbled in SaaS products, notably launching and growing CodeTutor which she sold after the birth of her first child.Timestamps00:00 Intro01:43 Randall's background03:33 Coding bootcamp to senior software engineer05:05 Getting a book published with O'Reilly06:37 Going hard on side projects in 202008:01 Audience building and writing another book10:04 Randall's course11:42 Randalls advice to early stage entreprenuers13:13 Why Randall hasn't started a successful SaaS15:47 RecommendationsRecommendationsBook - The DipPodcast - Software SocialIndie Hacker - Kyle GawleyMy linksTwitterIndie Bites TwitterIndie Bites YouTubeJoin the membershipPersonal Website2 Hour Podcast CoursePodPanda (hire me to edit your podcast)This Indie Life PodcastSponsor - EmailOctopus 🐙EmailOctopus is an independently owned email marketing platform, built to support other small growing businesses. With a focus on affordability and ease of use, EmailOctopus contains all of the features you need to reach and grow your audience. You can start today, with their industry leading free plan where you can contact up to 2,500 subscribers without paying a penny.
1/24/2024 • 16 minutes, 58 seconds
Can you really scale a No Code SaaS? - Kieran Ball, NoCodeLife
Kieran Ball is the founder of NoCodeLife, a selection of case studies of those making successful businesses using NoCode. Kieran also has courses on how to become a NoCode SaaS founder, specifically using the Bubble platform. I wanted to get Kieran on the pod to discuss and challenge the NoCode movement and if you can actually create a scalable product using the tools available, or if NoCode serves a different purpose.Timestamps00:00 108 - Kieran Ball02:07 Failing to learn how to code03:05 How Kieran discovered no code04:28 Are no code apps hacky?05:52 Who has been successful building no code tools?06:57 No code for MVPs or for actual startups09:28 Keiran's own blog, No Code Life10:19 Improving your marketing skillset12:49 Kieran's future with no code15:48 RecommendationsRecommendationsBook - The SaaS playbookPodcast - The Bootstrapped FounderIndie Hacker - Hazel Lim @byhazelimMy linksTwitterIndie Bites TwitterIndie Bites YouTubeJoin the membershipPersonal Website2 Hour Podcast CoursePodPanda (hire me to edit your podcast)This Indie Life PodcastSponsor - EmailOctopus 🐙EmailOctopus is an independently owned email marketing platform, built to support other small growing businesses. With a focus on affordability and ease of use, EmailOctopus contains all of the features you need to reach and grow your audience. You can start today, with their industry leading free plan where you can contact up to 2,500 subscribers without paying a penny.
1/11/2024 • 16 minutes, 45 seconds
B2C vs B2B SaaS as an indie hacker - Val Sopi, Blogstatic
Today I’m joined by Val Sopi, the founder of Blogstatic, a lightweight blogging platform built to take on the likes of Ghost. Currently Val is sitting around $1k a month, but with a low-priced annual plans approach, he’s relying on new sign ups and plan upgrades instead of recurring subscriptions. So he’s at a crossroads of needing to pour fuel on the fire to grow his low-cost blogging platform, or attempt to build a B2B SaaS, which he believes is a much more sustainable option for an indie founder. Val has been hardened by business successes and failures, so I love his pragmatic approach to the decisions he’s making.Timestamps
00:00 Intro
01:39 Val's background - web design shop to failed SaaS
04:10 Learning to code and starting Claritask
04:53 Selling Claritask
05:52 Launching Blogstatic
06:42 Taking a loan to bet on himself
07:40 The crossroads of stagnating growth
08:39 Being a low cost alternative in a competitive market
12:30 Why Val won't take VC
14:06 Why Val is trying B2B instead of B2C
15:45 Recommendations
Recommendations
Book: The Inner Game of Tennis
Podcast: Startups for the Rest of Us
Indie Hacker: Joe Ashville
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Sponsor - EmailOctopus 🐙EmailOctopus is an independently owned email marketing platform, built to support other small growing businesses. With a focus on affordability and ease of use, EmailOctopus contains all of the features you need to reach and grow your audience. You can start today, with their industry leading free plan where you can contact up to 2,500 subscribers without paying a penny.
1/3/2024 • 17 minutes
How VEED bootstrapped to $7m ARR - Sabba Keynejad, VEED.io (2020)
Today I'm revisiting one of my favourite episodes, from 2020, with Sabba Keynejad, co-founder and CEO of VEED.io, an online video editing platform. When I interviewed Sabba, VEED were at around $2m ARR, fully bootstrapped. Since this interview, they’ve gone on to bootstrap to about $7m ARR before raising a whopping $35m series A from Sequoia. And when I first met Sabba, years before this interview, VEED was just a small product that wasn't generating any revenue. This episode is special to me because I’ve followed VEED’s journey from the start and it’s been inspiring to see. Timestamps
00:00 Intro
02:46 VEED origins
03:24 Differentiation
03:58 Picking a market
04:48 Hiring and learning new skills
06:16 Inflection points in growth
07:07 Quitting your job
07:45 Why you should find a cofounder
08:41 Getting the first users
09:47 Free vs paid
11:16 Growth tactics
12:04 Advice to other founders
13:01 Recommendations
Recommendations
Favourite indie hacker is Josh Pigford
Best book for indie hackers; Traction
Favourite podcast; How I Built This
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Sponsor - EmailOctopus 🐙EmailOctopus is an independently owned email marketing platform, built to support other small growing businesses. With a focus on affordability and ease of use, EmailOctopus contains all of the features you need to reach and grow your audience. You can start today, with their industry leading free plan where you can contact up to 2,500 subscribers without paying a penny.
12/27/2023 • 14 minutes, 23 seconds
Lemon Squeezy CTO on why he still makes side projects - Gilbert Pellegrom
Gilbert Pellegrom, is co-founder and CTO of Lemon Squeezy, a platform for selling software and digital products online. Previously Gilbert created the Nivo Slider all in 2010, which grew to millions of users before selling it. He then went on to work with Orman Clark at ThemeZilla and Dunked, who he’s teamed up with again to build Lemon Squeezy. What’s interesting about Gilbert is that despite being the CTO of a rapidly scaling startup, he’s still making and shipping side projects, which we’ll talk about more on this episode.If you want to hear more about Lemon Squeezy, I actually co-host their podcast called Make Lemonade, where I speak with their CEO JR Farr about the behind the scenes of building a bootstrapped company making millions.Sign up to the Indie Bites membership for $60 a year to access the full conversation with Gilbert.Timestamps
00:00 Intro
03:57 Working with Orman Clark at Themezilla and Dunked
06:11 Delicious Brains
06:40 Starting Lemon Squeezy
07:52 Why Gilbert makes side projects
10:36 Should you charge money for your side projects
12:58 Selling side projects
14:59 Recommendations
Recommendations
Book - Atomic Habits
Podcast - Yo!
Indie Hacker - Marcel Pociot
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Sponsor - EmailOctopus 🐙EmailOctopus is an independently owned email marketing platform, built to support other small growing businesses. With a focus on affordability and ease of use, EmailOctopus contains all of the features you need to reach and grow your audience. You can start today, with their industry leading free plan where you can contact up to 2,500 subscribers without paying a penny.
12/20/2023 • 16 minutes, 12 seconds
Scaling and exiting a $65k MRR with meal planning app - Jeffrey Bunn, Mealime & Clearful
Today I’m joined by Jeffrey Bunn, who is the co-founder of Clearful, a digital journal app he built with his wife, Maria. Previously they co-founded Mealime, a meal planning app which grew to a whopping $65k MRR before they exited in 2018. In this episode we cover the story of founding both apps, how they utilised the app stores for growth and why they started a B2C app in a crowded market.Timestamps00:00 Intro01:30 Starting Mealime07:07 Pivot to mobile and reducing prices08:36 Mealime Growth09:46 Private Equity Exit10:38 Life post-exit and learning to code12:24 Starting Clearful13:31 Clearful growth through the app store14:50 Runway and futureRecommendations
Book - Range by David Epstein
Podcast - Conversations with Tyler
Indie Hacker - Maria Golikova, Sebastian Röhl
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Sponsor - EmailOctopus 🐙EmailOctopus is an independently owned email marketing platform, built to support other small growing businesses. With a focus on affordability and ease of use, EmailOctopus contains all of the features you need to reach and grow your audience. You can start today, with their industry leading free plan where you can contact up to 2,500 subscribers without paying a penny.
12/13/2023 • 17 minutes, 14 seconds
The slow and steady path to growth - Michael Christofides
Today I’m joined by Michael Christofides, who is the founder of PgMustard, a product which helps people speed up Postgres queries. Michael started out working for a Devtools company as a product manager and went on to run customer success at London based unicorn, GoCardless. Now, Michael might not be as well known and successful as other popular indie hackers, but he works on his own terms and has been committed to his project for years.In this episode I want to unpack why Michael stays committed to his product despite slow growth, his unique approach to the indie lifestyle and where he wants to go in future.Timestamps
00:00 - Intro
02:18 - Michael's early career
03:09 - The PGMustard idea
04:28 - Building for a market rather than scratching your own itch
06:23 - Launching PGMustard
08:15 - Going full time on PGMustard
09:47 - Leaving well paid jobs at $0 MRR
11:28 - Intentional slow growth
15:43 - Recommendations
Recommendations
Book - Small Giants
Podcast - Panic Podcast
Indie Hacker - Michael Koper
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Sponsor - EmailOctopus 🐙EmailOctopus is an independently owned email marketing platform, built to support other small growing businesses. With a focus on affordability and ease of use, EmailOctopus contains all of the features you need to reach and grow your audience. You can start today, with their industry leading free plan where you can contact up to 2,500 subscribers without paying a penny.
12/6/2023 • 16 minutes, 55 seconds
Arvid Kahl on side projects, hobbies and making money as a founder
Arvid Kahl runs The Bootstrapped Founder, a podcast, newsletter and educational resource to help founders grow successful bootstrapped businesses. He’s also written two books, Zero to Sold and The Embedded Entreprenuer. Arvid is a returning guest, having previously been on the show almost 3 years ago, to talk about his exit from FeedbackPanda, which he grew to $55k MRR with his partner, Danielle.In this episode we talk about life as a creator and solopreneur, how Arvid is scratching his SaaS itch and how people can leave their jobs to work on their side projects.👉 Get the full 55 minute conversation here.Timestamps
00:00 Intro
01:45 Turning hobbies into business
02:51 Structuring how you spend your time
05:14 Revenue for The Bootstrapped Founder
07:13 Why do consulting when you have runway
08:30 Scratching the coding itch
12:07 How to make a side project a main project
15:52 Recommendations
Recommendations(Prev. the mom test, IH pod and Sergio Mattei)
Book: The SaaS Playbook
Podcast: The Greatest Generation
Indie Hacker: Tony Dihn
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Sponsor - EmailOctopus 🐙EmailOctopus is an independently owned email marketing platform, built to support other small growing businesses. With a focus on affordability and ease of use, EmailOctopus contains all of the features you need to reach and grow your audience. You can start today, with their industry leading free plan where you can contact up to 2,500 subscribers without paying a penny.
11/29/2023 • 17 minutes, 6 seconds
Quitting his job and taking a £20k loan to go full time indie - Harvey Carpenter, Growform
Harvey Carpenter is the founder of Growform, a form builder which is now around 7K MRR. It's a mixture of enterprise and some other clients, and he's tackling a product in a market that is extremely competitive and crowded, but he's trying to carve out his own little slice of that market.Timestamps
00:00 Intro
01:21 Harvey's life before Growform
01:35 Side projects as a 17 yr old
04:10 Getting a law degree
05:04 The idea for Growform
06:42 Benefits of picking a niche
09:12 Growth tactics
10:06 Quitting his job and taking a loan
13:16 Future goals
13:48 Taking recreation seriously
Recommendations
Book: The Entrepreneur’s Guide to Keeping Your Sh*t Together
Podcast: Diary of a CEO
Indie Hacker: Jack Bridger
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Sponsor - EmailOctopus 🐙EmailOctopus is an independently owned email marketing platform, built to support other small growing businesses. With a focus on affordability and ease of use, EmailOctopus contains all of the features you need to reach and grow your audience. You can start today, with their industry leading free plan where you can contact up to 2,500 subscribers without paying a penny.
11/22/2023 • 15 minutes, 49 seconds
How to get to ramen profitability - Charlie Ward, Ramen Club
Today is a special episode, because it marks 100 episodes of Indie Bites. And to mark the occasion, I’m bringing back my guest from episode 1, Charlie Ward, founder of Ramen Club to talk about how he’s grown to community into the core of the London indie scene while scaling to £7k MRR in the process. Charlie has also been a long time supporter of the show, having sponsored well over 30 episodes and taking a bet on me early on.Timestamps
00:00 - Intro
01:40 - The impact Ramen Club has on other founders
03:08 - Rebranding to Ramen Club
04:56 - Advice for community building
06:27 - Advice to founders on ideas and growth
11:10 - Why you should be doing user research
14:35 - Recommendations
Recommendations
Book: $100m Offers
Podcast: Lex Fridman
Indie Hacker: Elston Baretto
Other links
Get Together book
Continuous Discovery Habits book
Rosieland
Charlie's Twitter
Ramen Club Podcast
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Sponsor - EmailOctopus 🐙EmailOctopus is an independently owned email marketing platform, built to support other small growing businesses. With a focus on affordability and ease of use, EmailOctopus contains all of the features you need to reach and grow your audience. You can start today, with their industry leading free plan where you can contact up to 2,500 subscribers without paying a penny.
11/15/2023 • 15 minutes, 49 seconds
Bootstrapping EmailOctopus to $3m+ ARR - Jonathan Bull & Tom Evans
Today I’m joined by Tom Evans and Jonathan Bull from EmailOctopus, an email platform who have bootstrapped to over $3m ARR since they were founded in 2014. They’ve been battling in a crowded and competitive market, with some huge funded companies to contend with, but they’ve made it work in an indie way. In this episode we talk about how they lost 99% of their users overnight, why they’ve chosen to compete on price rather than in a niche and their reasoning behind staying bootstrapped for so long.Get the extended episode here: https://indiebites.com/membership
00:00 Intro
01:24 EmailOctopus Background
02:57 How long did EmailOctopus take to build?
03:09 Launching for free
05:45 Tom joining EmailOctopus
07:11 Growth
07:48 Building in a crowded market
08:55 Differentiating on price
11:30 Raising vs bootstrapping
12:58 Changing goals as a bootstrapper
15:07 Fulfilling the side project urge
Recommendations
Book: ReWork, Four Thousand Weeks
Podcast: The Rest is Politics, Indie Bites
Indie Hacker: Pieter Levels, Jeffrey Bunn
Guest Links
Jonathan's Twitter
Tom's Twitter
Blog post about their growth
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Sponsor - EmailOctopus 🐙EmailOctopus is an independently owned email marketing platform, built to support other small growing businesses. With a focus on affordability and ease of use, EmailOctopus contains all of the features you need to reach and grow your audience. You can start today, with their industry leading free plan where you can contact up to 2,500 subscribers without paying a penny.
11/8/2023 • 17 minutes, 11 seconds
Building a financial engine for your indie business - Justin Jackson
In this episode I have a returning guest, someone who is a keystone of the bootstrapping community, it’s Justin Jackson, co-founder of Transistor, MegaMaker and more. Today we have an unstructured but very useful chat about building a financial engine for your business. This is a topic that has come up countless times in my indie journey and I think it’s something that a lot of indie businesses don’t address as early and seriously as they should. There a ton of actionable tips in this conversation about how to manage your finances, building a solid, profitable business and what to do when things aren’t going well.Get the extended episode here: https://indiebites.com/membershipTimestamps
00:00 Intro
01:45 James shocked by tax
02:31 Profit first
06:51 Building a financial engine
09:40 Things falling apart with depression
11:00 Desperation affects creativity
11:49 How to build your financial engine
Recommendations (from prev ep)
Book: Life Profitability
Podcast: Software Social
Indie Hacker: Derek Sivers
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Sponsor - EmailOctopus 🐙EmailOctopus is an independently owned email marketing platform, built to support other small growing businesses. With a focus on affordability and ease of use, EmailOctopus contains all of the features you need to reach and grow your audience. You can start today, with their industry leading free plan where you can contact up to 2,500 subscribers without paying a penny
11/1/2023 • 15 minutes, 48 seconds
Rob Walling on multiple projects, why building an audience is dumb and other SaaS wisdom
Rob Walling is an absolute legend in the bootstrapping and indie scene. He’s a veteran entrepreneur with his most notable exit being Drip in 2016. Rob also founded MicroConf, started TinySeed and is the host of the Startups for the Rest of Us podcast, which has over 680 episodes having started in 2010. It doesn’t stop there for Rob, he’s also written 4 books, Start Small Stay Small, Start Marketing the Day You Start Coding, The Entrepreneurs Guide to Keeping Your Shit Together and most recently, The SaaS Playbook.Get the hour long episode here: https://indiebites.com/membershipTimestamps
00:00 Intro / Sponsor
02:03 Why Rob wouldn't do SaaS again
03:43 What would an alternative reality look like for Rob
05:46 Founder retreats
07:40 Building an audience first approach is dumb for SaaS
10:29 Building a network
12:38 Portfolio of projects
15:26 Recommendations
Recommendations
Book: Founding Sales, Deploy Empathy
Podcast: Comic Lab
Indie Hacker: Ruben Gamez
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Sponsor - EmailOctopus 🐙EmailOctopus is an independently owned email marketing platform, built to support other small growing businesses. With a focus on affordability and ease of use, EmailOctopus contains all of the features you need to reach and grow your audience. You can start today, with their industry leading free plan where you can contact up to 2,500 subscribers without paying a penny.
10/13/2023 • 17 minutes, 9 seconds
Growing an audience, making difficult decisions and launching screencasting.com - Aaron Francis
Aaron Francis is currently an Educator at Planet Scale, but you would have seen him all around the internet doing courses, YouTube videos, podcasts and more. Notably he was a founding member of the Hammerstone team, which he’s recently left, to focus his energy on doing something he loves. Most recently, Aaron has launched Screencasting.com, a course teaching you how to make better screencasts.Timestamps
00:00 Intro
01:25 Aaron's Background
02:10 Learning Software Engineering through books
03:24 Audience Building
05:51 Benefits of each content medium
08:07 Making time for everything
09:27 Having a full time job
10:23 Leaving Hammerstone
12:36 Launching Screencasting.com
14:33 How has the launch gone?
15:25 Recommendations
Recommendations
Book - Any textbook in your field
Podcast - No Plans to Merge
Indie Hacker - Jordan O’Connor
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Sponsor - EmailOctopus 🐙EmailOctopus is an independently owned email marketing platform, built to support other small growing businesses. With a focus on affordability and ease of use, EmailOctopus contains all of the features you need to reach and grow your audience. You can start today, with their industry leading free plan where you can contact up to 2,500 subscribers without paying a penny.
10/5/2023 • 16 minutes, 53 seconds
$20k MRR with Airtable app using YouTube and SEO for growth - Andy Cloke, Data Fetcher
Today I’m joined by a returning guest, Andy Cloke, who runs Data Fetcher. Data Fetcher is an API plugin for Airtable that he’s grown to 20k MRR. In our previous episode Andy was only at around £3k MRR, so in this conversation we talk about what he’s done to grow so rapidly, including investing in new marketing channels such as YouTube.Timestamps
00:00 Intro
01:58 Growing to 20k MRR
04:51 Building a machine
06:01 YouTube Strategy
09:09 Launching another product
11:38 Hiring and reinvesting into the business
13:07 Future of Data Fetcher
Recommendations
Book: Psychology of Money
Podcast: Acquired
Indie Hacker: Curtis Herbert
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Sponsor - EmailOctopus 🐙EmailOctopus is an independently owned email marketing platform, built to support other small growing businesses. With a focus on affordability and ease of use, EmailOctopus contains all of the features you need to reach and grow your audience. You can start today, with their industry leading free plan where you can contact up to 2,500 subscribers without paying a penny.
9/28/2023 • 15 minutes, 30 seconds
Making $200k a year teaching Google Sheets - Andrew Kamphey
Today I’m joined by Andrew Kamphey, who is the founder of Better Sheets, a platform of tools and tutorials to get better at using Google Sheets, that has done well over $200k in revenue since he launched in 2020. He started out working as a tech on cruise ships, before moving to LA to work in the film industry, which is where he gained all of his Google Sheets prowess. From here he’s had a meandering life journey, working while travelling South East Asia, starting and selling an influencer newsletter, writing a book about charging and even launching a SaaS. Andrew has had his finger in piece of the indie hacking pie and has now settled on being the Google Sheets guy. At least for now.Timestamps
00:00 - Intro
02:08 - Failing to go full time
04:13 - Selling Influence Weekly
06:26 - Starting BetterSheets
09:32 - Turning Better Sheets into a full time income
11:53 - Reluctancy to become the "Google Sheets Guy"
13:37 - Recommendations
Recommendations
Book: Lying for Money
Podcast: The Deep Life
Indie Hacker: Jon Yongfook, Danny Postma, James & Danielle
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Sponsor - EmailOctopus 🐙EmailOctopus is an independently owned email marketing platform, built to support other small growing businesses. With a focus on affordability and ease of use, EmailOctopus contains all of the features you need to reach and grow your audience. You can start today, with their industry leading free plan where you can contact up to 2,500 subscribers without paying a penny.
9/21/2023 • 14 minutes, 48 seconds
Bootstrapping Ticket Tailor to £6m ARR, selling and repurchasing the company, losing motivation and more - Jonny White
Jonny White is the founder of Ticket Tailor, a platform for selling tickets online doing over £6m ARR and growing. Jonny founded Ticket Tailor in 2011, grew it to £2k MRR and then sold it to a company called TimeOut a short while later. After a few stagnant years at TimeOut, Jonny then bought the company back to make the lifestyle business he’d always wanted. After hitting all his goals, Jonny made the decision to build out a team and bootstrap the company to profitability and beyond. Now with a team of 20+ people, Jonny has a whole new set of challenges he’s dealing with, which we dig into in this episode.Get the hour long episode here: https://indiebites.com/membershipTimestamps
00:00 Intro
01:51 - Jonny's background
02:48 - The idea for Ticket Tailor
04:39 - Getting those first few customers
05:14 - Reaching £2k MRR and considering fundraising
06:34 - Selling the company
08:00 - Buying back Ticket Tailor
09:17 - Post buy back
11:13 - Hiring a team / going beyond a lifestyle biz
12:12 - COVID
13:59 - Losing motivation post-covid
15:45 - Recommendations
Recommendations
Book: Donut Economics
Podcast: Missing Cryptoqueen
Indie Hacker: Pietro Saccamani
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Sponsor - EmailOctopus 🐙EmailOctopus is an independently owned email marketing platform, built to support other small growing businesses. With a focus on affordability and ease of use, EmailOctopus contains all of the features you need to reach and grow your audience. You can start today, with their industry leading free plan where you can contact up to 2,500 subscribers without paying a penny.
9/4/2023 • 16 minutes, 33 seconds
Carving a new life path with a newsletter about Workspaces - Ryan Gilbert, Workspaces
Ryan Gilbert is the creator of the Workspaces newsletter, which showcases the best workspaces in tech and beyond. He grew it to 6,000 subscribers and $2k per month with sponsors + affiliates, before being acquired by Loops (Founder Chris Frantz was on episode 61) and going on to be their first employee. In this episode we talk about how simplicity has been so important for growth of the newsletter, how he makes it appealing for guests to share and his reasoning for selling at such an early stage.Timestamps
00:00 Intro
01:26 Life before Workspaces
03:37 Did you have any side projects before workspaces?
04:47 Growth of the Workspaces newsletter
06:40 How long did each edition take?
07:45 The best workspaces
08:25 Monetizing the newsletter
10:22 Selling the newsletter
13:08 Imposter syndrome
13:57 Recommendations
Recommendations
Book - The Creative Act by Rick Rubin
Podcast - Creator Science
Indie Hacker - Brett Williams
Sponsor - EmailOctopus 🐙EmailOctopus is an independently owned email marketing platform, built to support other small growing businesses. With a focus on affordability and ease of use, EmailOctopus contains all of the features you need to reach and grow your audience. You can start today, with their industry leading free plan where you can contact up to 2,500 subscribers without paying a penny.
8/3/2023 • 15 minutes, 32 seconds
Taking on Bit.ly bootstrapped - Tim Leland, T.LY
Tim Leland is the founder of T.LY, a link shortener with almost half a million users that he recently quit his job to pursue full time. Tim started out building chrome extensions, including a weather extension that grew to 200k users at it’s peak. He then capitalised on Google closing down their link URL shortener and tried to build his own competitor, which is where T.LY was born. Tim has gone for the high volume, low price option for his product, which often isn’t recommended as a good route for Indie Hackers, but Tim has made it work.
00:00 Intro
05:15 Building a portfolio of extensions
07:45 Starting T.LY
10:06 Being the low price option
11:49 Getting users for T.LY
12:51 Quitting his job
15:13 Reccos
Recommendations
Book - Atomic Habits
Podcast - My First Million
Indie Hacker - Rob Walling
Sponsor - EmailOctopus 🐙EmailOctopus is an independently owned email marketing platform, built to support other small growing businesses. With a focus on affordability and ease of use, EmailOctopus contains all of the features you need to reach and grow your audience. You can start today, with their industry leading free plan where you can contact up to 2,500 subscribers without paying a penny.
7/21/2023 • 16 minutes, 19 seconds
Working towards life-changing outcomes as an indie hacker - Colleen Schnettler, HelloQuery
In this episode I’m joined by Colleen Schnettler, which a lot of you would have heard from through her Software Social podcast she co-hosts with Michele Hansen. Colleen has been on quite the journey over the past few years, going from years of contracting to launching her first product, Simple File Upload, then getting a large contracting gig with Hammerstone, landing a separate full-time job to then quit 3 weeks later to rejoin that Hammerstone as a co-founder. Now Colleen is working on a product called HelloQuery, a reporting tool for SQL queries which has been accepted into a recent TinySeed batch.What we covered:
00:00 Intro
02:03 Why start the Software Social podcast?
02:59 Why start building products
04:04 Colleen's first product: Simple File Upload
05:07 Why they stopped the podcast
06:37 Joining Hammerstone
08:50 Being a solo founder
10:16 Hello Query
11:47 Closing down a successful product
13:50 Reccos
Reccomendations
Book: The Mom Test
Podcast: Boostrapped Web
Indie Hacker: Corey Haines
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Sponsor - EmailOctopus 🐙EmailOctopus is an independently owned email marketing platform, built to support other small growing businesses. With a focus on affordability and ease of use, EmailOctopus contains all of the features you need to reach and grow your audience. You can start today, with their industry leading free plan where you can contact up to 2,500 subscribers without paying a penny.
7/4/2023 • 15 minutes, 38 seconds
Gamifying products, shipping quickly and knowing when to quit - Marc Louvion
Marc Louvion is an indie hacker with many many products. His tagline on his website is relatable for all “I was fired everywhere so I had to work for myself (even Tai Lopez fired me...)”. If you go to Marc’s Indie Page you can see all his projects, including Habits Garden, Gamify List, Visualise Habit, Make Landing & more. Marc is living in Bali and on his way to $5k MRR across his projects. You might have seen Marc on Twitter with his hilarious launch videos and candid build in public updates.Timestamps
00:00 Intro
01:32 Marc's indie hacker journey
03:07 Moving to Bali
03:39 Starting a glove business
05:52 Gamification
07:41 Challenges with gamification
08:29 Knowing when to quit a product
10:32 Portfolio of projects vs single focus
11:46 Marc's day to day
12:53 Building an AI product
14:00 Creative launch videos
15:14 Reccos
Recommendations
Book: Why We Sleep
Podcast: Indie Hackers
Indie Hacker: Danny Postma
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Sponsor - EmailOctopus 🐙EmailOctopus is an independently owned email marketing platform, built to support other small growing businesses. With a focus on affordability and ease of use, EmailOctopus contains all of the features you need to reach and grow your audience. You can start today, with their industry leading free plan where you can contact up to 2,500 subscribers without paying a penny.
6/14/2023 • 16 minutes, 9 seconds
Is indie hacking having an identity crisis? - Dominic Monn, MentorCruise
In this episode I’m bringing back a previous guest, Dom Monn, who is the founder of MentorCruise, which he’s now working full time on with a small team. I brought Dom back on to discuss something that has been on my mind, and has come up in twitter conversations recently which Dom has been involved in.Is indie hacking having an identity crisis? Is the indie label and mentality limiting success and holding many founders back? I think it could be and so we discuss why this might be happening and what we can do about it.
Jason's tweet which inspired this conversation
Mike's response
Dom's response
Timestamps
00:00 Intro
01:56 Indie hacker identity crisis
03:42 How indie hacking has changed
06:32 Why the indie label can be a limiter
08:20 Accepting slow growth instead of fixing it
10:33 Should we set bigger goals?
12:10 We still love the indie hacker community
13:50 Recommendations
Recommendations
Book - Sprint
Podcast - This Indie Life
Indie Hacker - Ramen Club
Follow Dom
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Hire him as a mentor
Personal site
My links
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Indie Bites YouTube
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2 Hour Podcast Course
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Sponsor - EmailOctopus 🐙EmailOctopus is an independently owned email marketing platform, built to support other small growing businesses. With a focus on affordability and ease of use, EmailOctopus contains all of the features you need to reach and grow your audience. You can start today, with their industry leading free plan where you can contact up to 2,500 subscribers without paying a penny.
6/1/2023 • 15 minutes, 47 seconds
How to find and validate your ideas - Bram Kanstein, Startup Stash / No Code MVP
Today I’m joined by Bram Kanstein, who you might know from Startup Stash, which is the most upvoted product ever on Product Hunt. Bram also started the No Code MVP a course, which shows you how to launch an MVP without code. In this episode we focus a lot on how indie hackers can find ideas and launch them the right way.Timestamps
00:00 Intro
03:18 Startup Stash
05:56 No Code MVP
09:47 Finding ideas
12:22 Idea validation
15:00 Recommendations
Recommendations
Book - Untethered Soul by Michael Singer
Podcast(s) - Joe Rogan, HIBT, MFM
Indie Hacker - Danny Postma
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2 Hour Podcast Course
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Sponsor - EmailOctopus 🐙EmailOctopus is an independently owned email marketing platform, built to support other small growing businesses. With a focus on affordability and ease of use, EmailOctopus contains all of the features you need to reach and grow your audience. You can start today, with their industry leading free plan where you can contact up to 2,500 subscribers without paying a penny.
5/27/2023 • 15 minutes, 58 seconds
Growing Frontend Mentor to 500k users and $30k MRR - Matt Studdert
Matt Studdert is the founder of Frontend Mentor, which helps people level up their front-end coding skills by building projects. They have over 500,000 users and are hovering around $30k MRR. Matt didn’t start out wanting to run a SaaS, starting out playing poker, then became a personal trainer, before changing his career and learning to code when he was 28.Timestamps:
00:00 Intro
02:16 Playing Poker full time
02:58 Becoming a personal trainer
04:24 Learning to code with General Assembly
06:33 Front End Mentor
08:33 Building a scrappy MVP
11:29 Growth for Front End Mentor
15:03 Reccos
Recommendations
Book - badass make users awesome
Podcast - Acquired
Indie Hacker - Arvid Kahl, Valentin Wallyn
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Sponsor - EmailOctopus 🐙EmailOctopus is an independently owned email marketing platform, built to support other small growing businesses. With a focus on affordability and ease of use, EmailOctopus contains all of the features you need to reach and grow your audience. You can start today, with their industry leading free plan where you can contact up to 2,500 subscribers without paying a penny.
4/30/2023 • 16 minutes, 2 seconds
Jordan O'Connor on running a $30k MRR SaaS and doing SEO consulting on the side
Jordan O’Connor is the founder of Closet Tools, a bootstrapped app that helps people sell more stuff on Poshmark which has been in and around the $30-40k MRR mark. He’s found a lot of his growth through SEO, like many successful entrepreneurs, and now helps other founders do the same through his Rank to Sell power half hours.Listen to the full 90 minute chat with Jordan here ->Timestamps
00:00 Intro
03:29 Jordan being awful with money
04:30 Jordan's indie hacking journey
06:10 Launching and failing with different products
07:06 Choosing SaaS
08:31 Starting closet tools
11:38 Pricing for Closet Tools
12:35 Reverse stair stepping with Rank to Sell (consulting)
16:08 Reccos
Recommendations
Book - Deep Work
Podcast - Deep Questions by Cal Newport
Indie Hacker - Pat Walls
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Sponsor - EmailOctopus 🐙EmailOctopus is an independently owned email marketing platform, built to support other small growing businesses. With a focus on affordability and ease of use, EmailOctopus contains all of the features you need to reach and grow your audience. You can start today, with their industry leading free plan where you can contact up to 2,500 subscribers without paying a penny.
4/19/2023 • 17 minutes, 3 seconds
Growing a $2m p/y indie business - Josh Ho, Referral Rock
Josh Ho is the founder and CEO of Referral Rock, a SaaS he founded in 2014 doing over $2m a year in revenue. Referral Rock helps businesses to design, launch and manage a customer referral program. Josh has had decades of experience as a founder, pouring his early entrepreneurship energy into a notes app that he ultimately couldn’t monetize.Timestamps00:00 - Intro01:24 - Josh's background02:11 - Lessons from a failed startup04:16 - Failed startup to new long term bet05:41 - The idea for Referral Rock06:59 - Pricing a B2C product08:33 - Marketing advice for indie hackers12:24 - Challenges along the way14:01 - Raising15:41 - RecommendationsRecommendations
Book - Extreme Entrepreneurship
Podcast - Don't Say Content
Indie Hacker - Monica Lent
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Sponsor - EmailOctopus 🐙EmailOctopus is an independently owned email marketing platform, built to support other small growing businesses. With a focus on affordability and ease of use, EmailOctopus contains all of the features you need to reach and grow your audience. You can start today, with their industry leading free plan where you can contact up to 2,500 subscribers without paying a penny.
4/12/2023 • 16 minutes, 30 seconds
Building a 6-figure creator business - Jay Clouse, Creator Science
Jay Clouse is the founder of Creator Science, which is a membership, community, newsletter and podcast helping you become build a creator business, which he bootstrapped to over $40k a month towards the end of last year. His podcast is one of the best produced shows out there and it’s on my very short list of shows that I can listen to every episode and know it’s going to be killer. I think the creator business angle is interesting for indie hackers who haven’t quite found a product yet and want to build something. Creating content and speaking to people in your niche, can help you find pain points and problems, while also building extra income for yourself.Timestamps
01:55 The Creative Elements podcast (now Creator Science)
04:45 How to have a point of differentiation
06:11 Building a creator business
08:23 Making $40k in one month
11:03 Multiple projects and revenue streams
13:10 How Jay spends his time
14:02 How to start out as a creator
15:19 Recommendations
Recommendations
Book - How to Win Friends and Influence People
Podcast - Bandsplain
Indie hacker / entrepreneur - Justin Moore
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Sponsor - EmailOctopus 🐙EmailOctopus is an independently owned email marketing platform, built to support other small growing businesses. With a focus on affordability and ease of use, EmailOctopus contains all of the features you need to reach and grow your audience. You can start today, with their industry leading free plan where you can contact up to 2,500 subscribers without paying a penny.
4/5/2023 • 16 minutes, 31 seconds
Building a $15k MRR side project while working at Stripe - Justin Duke, Buttondown
Justin Duke is the founder of Buttondown, a simple email newsletter tool without all the bloat. In December 2022 Buttondown was around $15k MRR. He also runs Spoonbill, which is a way to stay updated on what people change on their social profiles. At the time of recording this Justin was an engineering manager at Stripe so you’ll hear references to that, but he’s since left to go all in on being a founder.👉 Join the Indie Bites membership here.Timestamps
00:00 Intro
01:57 Origins of Buttondown
03:25 Buttondown launch
05:37 Keeping Buttondown as a side project
07:47 A pricing conundrum
09:26 Having a free plan
10:20 Finding balance
12:31 Are Stripe side-project friendly
13:56 Recommendations
Recommendations
Book - The Great Beanie Baby Bubble
Podcast - Metamuse
Indie Hacker - Amy Hoy
Newsletter - Matt Levine Money Stuff
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Sponsor - AhrefsThank you to Ahrefs for sponsoring Indie Bites. Ahrefs is the most complete and valuable SEO tool on the market. Bootstrapped companies such as VEED and Transistor have used Ahrefs extensively to understand how to craft their SEO strategies, which have been such a pivotal part of their growth.If you want to get more traffic from Google on your side-project, I’d recommend first trying out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools for free. You’ll see what keywords your pages are ranking for, understand how Google sees your content and discover what changes you need to improve your search ranking. You should also check out their YouTube channel to understand both the basics of SEO and some more advanced techniques.To try out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools, head to ahrefs.com/webmaster-tools
4/1/2023 • 15 minutes, 12 seconds
Breaking Convention: The Radical Thinking of Jack McDade and Statamic
Jack McDade is the creator of Statamic, a content management system for Laravel. What I love about Jack is how he approaches all of his projects, including Statamic, to just be different. There is so much cookie cutter content out there and everything just ends up looking the same - but not if Jack has anything to do with it. Just take a look at his personal website, his Radical Design course and Icons and you’ll see what I mean. I love it.👉 Join the Indie Bites membership here.Timestamps:
00:00 Intro
01:27 Why Jack started Statamic
02:58 Taking 6 years before going full time
04:20 What would Jack have done differently?
05:14 How to be different
07:40 The unfair indie hacker advantage
08:26 Radical Design Course
12:45 Learning with Jack
15:07 Recommendations
Recommendations
Book: Steal Like an Artist & Extreme Ownership
Podcast: Friendship Onion & Darknet Diarys
Indie Hacker: Adam Wathan
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Sponsor - AhrefsThank you to Ahrefs for sponsoring Indie Bites. Ahrefs is the most complete and valuable SEO tool on the market. Bootstrapped companies such as VEED and Transistor have used Ahrefs extensively to understand how to craft their SEO strategies, which have been such a pivotal part of their growth.If you want to get more traffic from Google on your side-project, I’d recommend first trying out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools for free. You’ll see what keywords your pages are ranking for, understand how Google sees your content and discover what changes you need to improve your search ranking. You should also check out their YouTube channel to understand both the basics of SEO and some more advanced techniques.To try out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools, head to ahrefs.com/webmaster-tools
3/25/2023 • 16 minutes, 25 seconds
From $0 to $10k MRR in 2 years - Elston Baretto, Tiiny Host (Revisited)
Elston Baretto was last on the pod in March 2021, when he’d just grown his tool, Tiiny.host, to $600 MRR and we recorded as part of my mission to share stories of unknown indie hackers with potential. Fast forward 2 years and Tiiny Host has grown to $10k MRR and Elston has just quit his job to become a full time indie hacker.👉 My side project, Whitstable Craft Co.Topics covered:
Hitting $10k MRR
Why PDF hosting has been pivotal for growth
Build what people search for
Why SEO has been such a huge growth driver
How to do SEO
Going full time
When is the right time to quit your job?
How much to pay yourself
Launching before it's perfect
Pressure of growth
How to keep indie hacking enjoyable
Recommendations
Book: The New New Thing
Podcast: Postgres.fm
Indie Hacker: Vetted Founders (tbc)
Follow Elston
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Tiiny Host
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Sponsor - AhrefsThank you to Ahrefs for sponsoring Indie Bites. Ahrefs is the most complete and valuable SEO tool on the market. Bootstrapped companies such as VEED and Transistor have used Ahrefs extensively to understand how to craft their SEO strategies, which have been such a pivotal part of their growth.If you want to get more traffic from Google on your side-project, I’d recommend first trying out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools for free. You’ll see what keywords your pages are ranking for, understand how Google sees your content and discover what changes you need to improve your search ranking. You should also check out their YouTube channel to understand both the basics of SEO and some more advanced techniques.To try out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools, head to ahrefs.com/webmaster-tools
3/19/2023 • 16 minutes, 22 seconds
Making $12k p/m with Wordpress plugins - Patrick Posner
Patrick Posner is the creator of a portfolio of Wordpress plugins which have been downloaded almost a million times collectively making him $12k p/m. Patrick went full time indie in 2020 and since then has both grown quickly and scaled back operations to build the best sort of life for him. I love these types of stories of relatively unknown indie hackers who are creating the dream life for themselves.What we covered in this episode:
Building Wordpress plugins on the side of a day job
Marketing for Wordpress plugins
Getting 1m downloads
Beating a domain reseller
Finding SEO keywords to rank for
Pricing yearly vs monthly
Growing fast and scaling back
Recommendations
Book - Why We Sleep
Podcast - The Bootstrapped Founder
Indie Hacker - tbc
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2 Hour Podcast Course
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Sponsor - AhrefsThank you to Ahrefs for sponsoring Indie Bites. Ahrefs is the most complete and valuable SEO tool on the market. Bootstrapped companies such as VEED and Transistor have used Ahrefs extensively to understand how to craft their SEO strategies, which have been such a pivotal part of their growth.If you want to get more traffic from Google on your side-project, I’d recommend first trying out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools for free. You’ll see what keywords your pages are ranking for, understand how Google sees your content and discover what changes you need to improve your search ranking. You should also check out their YouTube channel to understand both the basics of SEO and some more advanced techniques.To try out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools, head to ahrefs.com/webmaster-tools
3/15/2023 • 15 minutes, 39 seconds
From $50m VC-backed to $20k MRR notes app - Alex MacCaw, Reflect (prev. Clearbit)
Alex MacCaw is the founder of Reflect, a note taking app which he’s grown to $20k MRR with a team of 4. Previously, he was the co-founder of Clearbit, a VC-backed company that scaled to $50m in revenue. After stepping down as CEO of Clearbit, he decided to focus on doing the stuff he enjoys. So he’s sailing around the world building an app that gets him excited every day.👉 My side project, Whitstable Craft Co.What we covered in this episode:
Why Alex dropped out of school
Coding without a CS degree
Being unemployable
Starting Clearbit
Stepping down as CEO of Clearbit
Boostrapping Reflect
Why another note taking app?
Building what you enjoy
Growing to 20k MRR
Getting the first users for your product
Sailing around the world
Recommendations
Book: Isaac Asimov's Guide to Earth and Space
Podcast: In Our Time
Indie Hacker: Adam Wathan
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Sponsor - AhrefsThank you to Ahrefs for sponsoring Indie Bites. Ahrefs is the most complete and valuable SEO tool on the market. Bootstrapped companies such as VEED and Transistor have used Ahrefs extensively to understand how to craft their SEO strategies, which have been such a pivotal part of their growth.If you want to get more traffic from Google on your side-project, I’d recommend first trying out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools for free. You’ll see what keywords your pages are ranking for, understand how Google sees your content and discover what changes you need to improve your search ranking. You should also check out their YouTube channel to understand both the basics of SEO and some more advanced techniques.To try out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools, head to ahrefs.com/webmaster-tools
3/10/2023 • 16 minutes, 58 seconds
Stair stepping to millions in SaaS revenue - Craig Hewitt, Castos
Craig Hewitt is the Founder and CEO of Castos, a bootstrapped podcast hosting and analytics platform with a services arm for podcast production. He’s been in podcasting almost a decade, having started his own show, Rogue Startups and his production service Podcast Motor (which he folded into Castos). Craig not only shares his ponderings on his show, but he also writes a weekly newsletter called Founder Insights.What we covered in this episode:
Craig's background in sales
Launching a podcasting productized service in 2014
Stair stepping to SaaS
What is Stair Stepping?
Acquiring Seriously Simple Podcasting
Product positioning
Growth and marketing for Castos
His approach to podcastingCastos Originals
Bootstrapping vs raising
Founder Insights newsletter
Recommendations
Book: Who Not How by Dan Sullivan
Podcast: Startups for the Rest of Us
Indie Hacker: Moritz Dausinger
Follow Craig
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Buy A Wallet
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Sponsor - AhrefsThank you to Ahrefs for sponsoring Indie Bites. Ahrefs is the most complete and valuable SEO tool on the market. Bootstrapped companies such as VEED and Transistor have used Ahrefs extensively to understand how to craft their SEO strategies, which have been such a pivotal part of their growth.If you want to get more traffic from Google on your side-project, I’d recommend first trying out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools for free. You’ll see what keywords your pages are ranking for, understand how Google sees your content and discover what changes you need to improve your search ranking. You should also check out their YouTube channel to understand both the basics of SEO and some more advanced techniques.To try out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools, head to ahrefs.com/webmaster-tools
3/8/2023 • 16 minutes, 37 seconds
Daniel Fayle: from commercial banker to making millions in software
Today I’m joined by Dan Fayle, who is the co-founder of Chekkit, a company that’s he bootstrapped to almost $2.5m ARR and 20 employees. There’s a few interesting things about Dan’s story I know you’re going to like. This is his first company and he quit his job to go all-in with 3 co-founders, he got his early customers through, and I’m not kidding, door to door sales and finally he’s not changed the price of the product since it’s launch 6 years ago.What we covered in this episode:
Dan’s background
Why he went all-in on Chekkit from the beginning
How he got his early customers from door to door sales
How to make cold email work at scale
Biggest growth channels
How an early pivot lead to more growth
Why they stuck to their $99 p/m price for years
What’s next for the business
Recommendations
Book: Shoe Dog
Podcast: The Move
Indie Hacker: Nathan Barry
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Sponsor - AhrefsThank you to Ahrefs for sponsoring Indie Bites. Ahrefs is the most complete and valuable SEO tool on the market. Bootstrapped companies such as VEED and Transistor have used Ahrefs extensively to understand how to craft their SEO strategies, which have been such a pivotal part of their growth.If you want to get more traffic from Google on your side-project, I’d recommend first trying out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools for free. You’ll see what keywords your pages are ranking for, understand how Google sees your content and discover what changes you need to improve your search ranking. You should also check out their YouTube channel to understand both the basics of SEO and some more advanced techniques.To try out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools, head to ahrefs.com/webmaster-tools
3/3/2023 • 16 minutes, 5 seconds
How Ahrefs Built A Best-In-Class SEO Strategy - Tim Soulo, Ahrefs
Tim Soulo is the CMO at Ahrefs, one of the biggest and best SEO tools on the internet. Ahrefs are one of the clear success stories as a bootstrapped company, growing to be a an 8 figure brand over the past decade. Things really took off when Tim took over marketing for the company back in 2015, first focusing on growing the blog, before experimenting with different marketing channel to bring Ahrefs to its current size. In this episode Tim brings a mini SEO masterclass for SaaS founders, gives his thoughts on AI content and reveals if he has ambitions to start a indie project for himself.Join the Indie Bites membership 👈What we covered in this episode
The basics of SEO for a SaaS tool
A mini SEO masterclass for indie SaaS tools
Why credibility is important for SEO
Tim’s thoughts on AI content
How “original work” is essential
What marketing channel is going to work in 2023
Tim’s favourite marketing experiments for Ahrefs
Does Tim have any indie hacker ambitious to run his own company
Recommendations
Book: Perennial Seller by Ryan Holiday
Podcast: The Prince
Indie Hacker: Tim likes everyone
Follow Tim
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Sponsor - Ramen ClubMy favourite community has just got a significant upgrade as it rebrands to Ramen Club, the best community to help you get to Ramen Profitability.Ramen club has 4 remote coworking sessions a week, masterminds, accountability calls, live AMAs, a fractional CFO, in-house VA, discounts and so much more. But most of all, the founder Charlie has done a wonderful job at cultivating a wonderfully friendly and supportive community.To join the world's most supportive community for bootstrapped founders to reach ramen profitable and beyond, head to ramenclub.so and use code "INDIEBITES" to let Charlie know I sent you and get 50% off your first month.
3/1/2023 • 15 minutes, 54 seconds
Bootstrapping a leather supply business to $50k in sales - Jared Maddern, Beamhouse Leather
Today I’m joined by Jared Maddern, the founder of Beamhouse Leather, a leather supply business he’s grown to £45k in sales in the past 2 years. Some of you might know I run a handmade leather wallet business on the side, called Whitstable Craft Co, and so this is a little look into the other part of my life.Although Jared doesn’t run an indie SaaS, I wanted to bring slightly different perspective of being an indie entreprenuer. We discuss how building a business in a growing market has and selling pick axes to gold miners strategy has led to his growth, what it’s like working with physical goods and why he put £10k of his own money to take the business to the next level.📹 Watch this episode on YouTube.What we discussed in this episode:
Jared’s taco truck
How he started leathercrafting
Where he got his first leather from
How to learn leathercrafting
How Beamhouse leather started
Starting on Etsy instead of his own website
The effect of the pandemic on hobbies
Investing £12k for leather machinery
Investing personal money
Wanting to keep the business as a side project
Recommendations
Book: How to Win Friends and Influence People
Podcast: My First Million
Indie Hacker: Chris Orraman
Follow Me
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Buy A Wallet
2 Hour Podcast Course
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Sponsor - AhrefsThank you to Ahrefs for sponsoring Indie Bites. Ahrefs is the most complete and valuable SEO tool on the market. Bootstrapped companies such as VEED and Transistor have used Ahrefs extensively to understand how to craft their SEO strategies, which have been such a pivotal part of their growth.If you want to get more traffic from Google on your side-project, I’d recommend first trying out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools for free. You’ll see what keywords your pages are ranking for, understand how Google sees your content and discover what changes you need to improve your search ranking. You should also check out their YouTube channel to understand both the basics of SEO and some more advanced techniques.To try out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools, head to ahrefs.com/webmaster-tools
1/17/2023 • 16 minutes, 58 seconds
How to build a newsletter business - Louis Nicholls, SparkLoop
Louis Nicholls is the co-founder of SparkLoop, a product that helps newsletter operators grow through referral partnerships. Indie hackers might know Louis from his Sales for Founders course which he ran a few years ago, as well as his many other projects.What we covered in this episode:
How Sparkloop Started
How Louis met his cofounder Manuel
Going Niche vs Broad
Pursuing a growing market
What is your unique competitive advantage?
Avoiding shiny object syndrome
Speaking to your customers
How does a newsletter referral program work?
Can you start a referral program from the beginning?
What’s the value of a newsletter subscriber?Sparkloop calculator
Sparkloop growth from day 1
How big is Sparkloop?
How to start and grow a newsletter
Louis’ favourite newsletters
Lenny’s Newsletter
Morning Brew
Why We Buy
Recommendations
Book: Wuthering Heights
Podcast: Default Alive
Indie Hacker: Josh Ho
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This Indie Life Podcast
Sponsor - AhrefsThank you to Ahrefs for sponsoring Indie Bites. Ahrefs is the most complete and valuable SEO tool on the market. Bootstrapped companies such as VEED and Transistor have used Ahrefs extensively to understand how to craft their SEO strategies, which have been such a pivotal part of their growth.If you want to get more traffic from Google on your side-project, I’d recommend first trying out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools for free. You’ll see what keywords your pages are ranking for, understand how Google sees your content and discover what changes you need to improve your search ranking. You should also check out their YouTube channel to understand both the basics of SEO and some more advanced techniques.To try out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools, head to ahrefs.com/webmaster-tools
11/15/2022 • 16 minutes, 32 seconds
Near death VC experience to $25k p/m bootstrapped - Kyle Gawley, Gravity
Kyle Gawley is the founder of Gravity, which he’s bootstrapped to over $25k p/m. In 2012, he scaled a vc-backed company, called Get Invited, to $5m in sales, before a near-death experience made him rethink how he lived his life. Now, Kyle is travelling the world building his bootstrapped SaaS. Let’s find out how he did it.Join the Indie Bites membership 👈What we covered in this episode
Starting out on the VC path
What Kyle loved about working in VC
Having a near death experienceListen to Kyle on Indie Hackers
How he changed his life after
Deciding to become a digital nomad
Starting Gravity to solve his own problem
What Gravity is for non-technical folks
Pricing, should you go cheap or upstream?
Using Twitter and SEO for customer acquisition
Kyle’s thoughts on single focus vs small bets
Kyle’s new AI project
Recommendations
Book: Zero to Sold by Arvid Kahl
Podcast: Indie Bites (how meta)
Indie Hacker: Pieter Levels
Follow Kyle
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Personal site
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Sponsor - Ramen ClubMy favourite community has just got a significant upgrade as it rebrands to Ramen Club, the best community to help you get to Ramen Profitability.Ramen club has 4 remote coworking sessions a week, masterminds, accountability calls, live AMAs, a fractional CFO, in-house VA, discounts and so much more. But most of all, the founder Charlie has done a wonderful job at cultivating a wonderfully friendly and supportive community.To join the world's most supportive community for bootstrapped founders to reach ramen profitable and beyond, head to ramenclub.so and use code "INDIEBITES" to let Charlie know I sent you and get 50% off your first month.
11/8/2022 • 16 minutes, 20 seconds
Bootstrapping to $3.5m ARR from YouTuber to Founder - Sam King, Flick
Sam King is the founder of Flick, a tool for managing and growing your social media, doing over $3.5m ARR fully bootstrapped. Sam has taken a unique path into bootstrapping, first being a YouTuber, then running an agency before flipping it into a SaaS with Flick. There is an hour long extended version of this show available on the Indie Bites membership, head to indiebites.com/membership to sub.What we covered in this episode:
Starting out as a YouTuber
Pivoting from YouTuber to starting an agency
Pivoting the agency to start a SaaS
Marketing Sam used to grow Flick
Affiliate marketing
Building an MVP
Hiring challenges
Recommendations
Book: Shoe Dog
Podcast: Diary of a CEO
Indie Hacker: Baretto
FollowSam on TwitterFollow Me
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Sponsor - FiguraOften great design makes products stand out in this day and age; stop trying to figure it out yourself. Figura offers vetted product designers for startups and fast-growing companies. Find your first designer or contractor, or land a helping hand for your product in less than 48hours. Save $199 and start your project for free, using code "INDIE199".Head to figura.digital to try it out.
11/2/2022 • 14 minutes, 39 seconds
A masterclass in customer research as a founder - Michele Hansen, Deploy Empathy
Michele Hansen is the co-founder of Geocodio, a SaaS business that provides geocoding and data matching for addresses, co-host of the fantastic podcast Software Social and author of the book Deploy Empathy, which is all about how to do great customer interviews. We cover a lot of ground in this short episode, including how to write a book, building in public and mental health as a founder. Along with some concrete tips on how exactly you can do customer research.What we covered in this episode:
Michele’s podcast tour
Building in public
Why context is important for Twitter debates
The real reason Michele wrote her book
Starting with a newsletter
How to do customer research
How to understand your customers
Changing their podcast support model
Mental health as a founder
Being a founder with ADHD
Recommendations
Book: The Little Book that Builds Wealth; Charlie Wilson’s War
Podcast: The Indicator
Indie Hacker: Marie Ng
Follow Michele
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Sponsor - Ramen ClubMy favourite community has just got a significant upgrade as it rebrands to Ramen Club, the best community to help you get to Ramen Profitability.Ramen club has 4 remote coworking sessions a week, masterminds, accountability calls, live AMAs, a fractional CFO, in-house VA, discounts and so much more. But most of all, the founder Charlie has done a wonderful job at cultivating a wonderfully friendly and supportive community.To join the world's most supportive community for bootstrapped founders to reach ramen profitable and beyond, head to ramenclub.so and use code "INDIEBITES" to let Charlie know I sent you and get 50% off your first month.
10/26/2022 • 16 minutes, 6 seconds
Bootstrapping, AppSumo deals and productivity tools - Macgill Davis / Will Goto, Rize.io
Macgill Davis and Will Goto are the founders of Rize, a time-tracking platform that helps you increase your productivity, started in August 2020. Will and Macgill met at a company called Peer, which then got acquired by Twitter, they then left Twitter and founded a company called Humble Dot, which they raised for but unfortunately had to shut down.Join the membership for extended conversations 👈What we covered in this episode:
Working on a side project while at Twitter
Raising funding then leaving their jobs
Co-founders with the same technical background
A different approach to finding a co-founder
Shutting down a business when it’s not doing well
Searching for a new idea and solving your own problem
Creating a landing page and running some ads
Picking a market to focus on
Time tracking for productivity
Getting traction through AppSumo
Cash up front with lifetime deals
Raising vs bootstrapping
How to be more productive
Recommendations
Book: Deep Work by Cal Newport, Atomic Habits by James Clear
Podcast: The Rest is History/Revolutions, Masters of Scale
Indie Hacker: Tony Dinh, Arvid Kahl
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Macgill on Twitter
Will on Twitter
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Sponsor - FiguraOften great design makes products stand out in this day and age; stop trying to figure it out yourself. Figura offers vetted product designers for startups and fast-growing companies. Find your first designer or contractor, or land a helping hand for your product in less than 48hours. Save $199 and start your project for free, using code "INDIE199".Head to figura.digital to try it out.
10/4/2022 • 16 minutes, 27 seconds
Building a community of generalists on a remote island - Milly Tamati, Generalist World
Milly Tamati is not your usual founder. She lives on an remote island off Scotland with a population of just 170 people, previously co-owned a hostel in Thailand, co-founded a wine-tour in Australia and founded an illustration-agency in the UK. Now she’s working on a community called generalist.world, where’s she’s helping generalists like us indie hackers, find like minded individuals and jobs that fit us well.What we covered in this episode:
Living on a remote island with 170 people
Remote life vs city life
Being isolated when not in a city
Embracing communities
Milly’s crazy career journey
Getting a customer in 12 hours
Testing your product before you launch
Why generalists aren’t valued in the world
Growing to 850 community members in a few months
How to cultivate community
Recommendations
Book - Range by David Epstein
Podcast - Lennys Podcast
Indie Hacker - Molly Retter
Follow Milly
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LinkedIn
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Sponsor - Ramen ClubMy favourite community has just got a significant upgrade as it rebrands to Ramen Club, the best community to help you get to Ramen Profitability.Ramen club has 4 remote coworking sessions a week, masterminds, accountability calls, live AMAs, a fractional CFO, in-house VA, discounts and so much more. But most of all, the founder Charlie has done a wonderful job at cultivating a wonderfully friendly and supportive community.To join the world's most supportive community for bootstrapped founders to reach ramen profitable and beyond, head to ramenclub.so and use code "INDIEBITES" to let Charlie know I sent you and get 50% off your first month.
9/27/2022 • 16 minutes, 23 seconds
Bootstrapping Helpkit to $4.5k MRR - Dominik Sobe, Helpkit
Today I’m joined by Dominik Sobe, the founder of Helpkit, a product he started last year that turns Notion pages into a professional help center, doing $4.5k MRR. In this episode we talk about Dom’s many failed projects, how he finally found something that worked with Helpkit and how he went from wanting to be a management consultant to being an indie hacker.What we covered in this episode:
Dom’s previous projects
Wanting to become a management consultant
Management consultant to indie hacker
Making his first internet money
Being embarrassed about your first product
Overengineering your first product
Building an MVP during a hackathon
Validation before building a product
Side projects as marketing
Building in a growing market
Investing in SEO
Recommendations
Book: Start Small, Stay Small by Rob Walling
Podcast: Indie Hackers
Indie Hacker: Minh-Phuc Tran
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Sponsor - FiguraOften great design makes products stand out in this day and age; stop trying to figure it out yourself. Figura offers vetted product designers for startups and fast-growing companies. Find your first designer or contractor, or land a helping hand for your product in less than 48hours. Save $199 and start your project for free, using code "INDIE199".Head to figura.digital to try it out.
9/26/2022 • 15 minutes, 5 seconds
Solo founder grows reverse job board to $100k a year - Joe Masilotti, RailsDevs
Joe Masilotti is the founder of RailsDevs a reverse job board for Ruby on Rails developers, which is over $4k MRR and on for $100k revenue. Joe also runs the monthly Hotwire Dev newsletter, which has over 2,000 subs. And then late last year, Joe sold his side-project Mugshot Bot, which he took from idea to sale in just 14 months.What we covered on this episode:
How and why Joe sold Mugshot Bot at $200 MRR
When to stop working on projects
How RailsDevs started with a spreadsheet
Solving a problem with a simple solution
Why a reverse jobs board works
A unique approach to a marketplace business
Growing RailsDevs (from both sides)
Being an embedded entrepreneur
Why RailsDevs has a hiring fee and subscription
Dealing with high churn
Growing a newsletter to 2,300 subs
Recommendations
Book: Obviously Awesome by April Dunford
Podcast: The Business of Authority
Indie Hacker: Colleen Schnettler
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Read his blog
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Sponsor - Ramen ClubMy favourite community has just got a significant upgrade as it rebrands to Ramen Club, the best community to help you get to Ramen Profitability.Ramen club has 4 remote coworking sessions a week, masterminds, accountability calls, live AMAs, a fractional CFO, in-house VA, discounts and so much more. But most of all, the founder Charlie has done a wonderful job at cultivating a wonderfully friendly and supportive community.To join the world's most supportive community for bootstrapped founders to reach ramen profitable and beyond, head to ramenclub.so and use code "INDIEBITES" to let Charlie know I sent you and get 50% off your first month.
9/13/2022 • 16 minutes, 18 seconds
Focusing on one product in a strong market (for 15 years) - Geoff Roberts, Outseta
Geoff Roberts is the co-founder of Outseta, a bootstrapped all-in-one platform to help manage and grow your recurring revenue business. Before Outseta, Geoff was Head of Marketing for Buildium, a product that went through the phases of bootstrapping, raising and exiting, that was started by current co-founder Dimitris.What we covered in this episode:
Taking a big 15 year bet on your business
Going into an established, durable market
Why not raise for the company?
Single focus vs portfolio of small bets
Why Outseta focused on brand building and not SEO
Marketing trade-offs
Why freemium doesn’t work for everyone
Building a flat, self-managed organisation
Recommendations
Book: Reinventing Organistations; Life Profitability
Podcast: Tim Ferris Show
Indie Hacker: Anthony Castrio
Follow Geoff
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Read the Outseta Blog
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Sponsor - FiguraOften great design makes products stand out in this day and age; stop trying to figure it out yourself. Figura offers vetted product designers for startups and fast-growing companies. Find your first designer or contractor, or land a helping hand for your product in less than 48hours. Save $199 and start your project for free, using code "INDIE199".Head to figura.digital to try it out.
9/6/2022 • 16 minutes, 22 seconds
Ending the VC dream and pivoting to an indie company - David Kofoed Wind, Eduflow
David Kofoed Wind is the co-founder and CEO of Eduflow an education platform started in 2015 as Peergrade, which was a peer to peer feedback tool. David is the definition of technical, having studied for a degree in applied math and computer science, then a Ph.D in machine learning. This is where the idea for Peergrade was born, as he started teach a course in data science and solved his own problem.👉 Extended version of this episode.What we covered in this episode:
How Peergrade started in 2015
Scratching your own itch
Selling to universities
Using your "unfair advantages"
Why David took a Ph.D
What it's like building a product with a Ph.D
Having a terrible product
Going for and ending the VC dream
Pivoting Peergrade to Eduflow
Why David resonates with Indie Hackers
Recommendations
Book: Rework by Basecamp
Podcast: Out of Beta
Indie Hacker: Jon Yongfook
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Sponsor - Ramen ClubMy favourite community has just got a significant upgrade as it rebrands to Ramen Club, the best community to help you get to Ramen Profitability.Ramen club has 4 remote coworking sessions a week, masterminds, accountability calls, live AMAs, a fractional CFO, in-house VA, discounts and so much more. But most of all, the founder Charlie has done a wonderful job at cultivating a wonderfully friendly and supportive community.To join the world's most supportive community for bootstrapped founders to reach ramen profitable and beyond, head to ramenclub.so and use code "INDIEBITES" to let Charlie know I sent you and get 50% off your first month.
8/30/2022 • 15 minutes, 19 seconds
How to build in public - Kevon Cheung, Public Lab
If you’re wanting to learn about building in public, Kevon Cheung is your guy. After not getting the fulfilment he desired from the VC funded startup dream, Kevon struck out on his own in 2020 to become an indie hacker. Since then he’s launched the Build in Public Mastery course, started a newsletter called Public Lab, wrote the Definitive Guide to Building in Public and then to top this all off, wrote a book called Find Joy in Chaos. What we covered in this episode:
Building credibility
Taking a 6 month bet
Starting from scratch to learn a trend
Choosing to build in public
Anyone can learn any topic
Is building in public just sharing MRR numbers?
What is building in public?
False positives of building an audience
Building a creator business
How to differentiate course content to blog content
Info products vs SaaS
Recommendations:
Book: Life Is What You Make It by Peter Buffet, $100m Offers by Alex Hormozi
Podcast: Socialette, The Bootstrapped Founder
Indie Hacker: Monica Lent, Jay Clouse, Marie Ng
Follow Kevon
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Personal website
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2 Hour Podcast Course
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Sponsor - Ramen ClubMy favourite community has just got a significant upgrade as it rebrands to Ramen Club, the best community to help you get to Ramen Profitability.Ramen club has 4 remote coworking sessions a week, masterminds, accountability calls, live AMAs, a fractional CFO, in-house VA, discounts and so much more. But most of all, the founder Charlie has done a wonderful job at cultivating a wonderfully friendly and supportive community.To join the world's most supportive community for bootstrapped founders to reach ramen profitable and beyond, head to ramenclub.so and use code "INDIEBITES" to let Charlie know I sent you and get 50% off your first month.
8/22/2022 • 16 minutes, 1 second
How to build a brand for your indie product - Marie Ng, Llama Life
Marie Ng is the founder of Llama Life, a to-do-list app that helps you focus. As someone who struggles with focus myself, Marie’s app looked to be the perfect thing. Having taught herself how to code 2 years ago, after a career in branding, Marie did what everyone does when they learn to code, build a to do list app. But with her branding background and new quirky angle on a productivity app, she’s made it work. From a solo indie project to now raising a $690k pre-seed round, Marie is making her entrepreneurial dream happen.👉 Extended version of this episode.What we discussed in this episode:
How Marie got into branding
What is branding?
Why indie hackers should consider their “brand”
How to create a brand
Building a product to help with ADHD
Building to solve your own problem
How to work with ADHD
Llama Life’s brand impact
Why Marie raised funding
Recommendations
Book: Honest Guide to Indie Making by Kyleigh Smith
Podcast: The Best One Yet
Indie Hacker: Carl Poppa
Follow MarieTwitterFollow Me👉 Listen to my new podcast, No More Mondays.
Twitter
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Buy A Wallet
2 Hour Podcast Course
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Sponsor - Ramen ClubMy favourite community has just got a significant upgrade as it rebrands to Ramen Club, the best community to help you get to Ramen Profitability.Ramen club has 4 remote coworking sessions a week, masterminds, accountability calls, live AMAs, a fractional CFO, in-house VA, discounts and so much more. But most of all, the founder Charlie has done a wonderful job at cultivating a wonderfully friendly and supportive community.To join the world's most supportive community for bootstrapped founders to reach ramen profitable and beyond, head to ramenclub.so and use code "INDIEBITES" to let Charlie know I sent you and get 50% off your first month.
8/8/2022 • 15 minutes, 6 seconds
Why you need a single focus (and ditch your portfolio of projects) - Chris Frantz, Loops
Chris Frantz is the co-founder of Loops, YC backed email tool for startups. Chris is one of those people who just knows how to run a SaaS business, having founded and sold Snazzy AI, acquired by Unbounce last year. Chris has been living rent free in my brain after a conversation we had a few weeks ago about my multiple projects. A lot of you are going to have multiple projects too, and wondering why you’re not getting anywhere with them. In this episode, Chris is going to explain why.What we cover in this episode
Some of Chris previous bootstrapped projectsPH profile
How Chris started and sold Snazzy.aiSelling article
Tackling email with Loops.so
Making the chef’s knife of email
Why you should have a single focus
Why having a portfolio of small bets doesn’t work
Doing the hard things
Having hobby projects vs a business
Recommendations
Book: Atomic Habits
Podcast: The Vergecast
Indie Hacker: Sahil Bloom
Follow Chris
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Personal site
Follow Me👉 Listen to my new podcast, No More Mondays.
Twitter
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2 Hour Podcast Course
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Sponsor - Ramen ClubMy favourite community has just got a significant upgrade as it rebrands to Ramen Club, the best community to help you get to Ramen Profitability.Ramen club has 4 remote coworking sessions a week, masterminds, accountability calls, live AMAs, a fractional CFO, in-house VA, discounts and so much more. But most of all, the founder Charlie has done a wonderful job at cultivating a wonderfully friendly and supportive community.To join the world's most supportive community for bootstrapped founders to reach ramen profitable and beyond, head to ramenclub.so and use code "INDIEBITES" to let Charlie know I sent you and get 50% off your first month.
5/28/2022 • 15 minutes, 56 seconds
Growing Dependabot to $14k MRR before selling to Github - Grey Baker, Dependabot
Grey Baker is the co-founder of Dependabot, which is a bot that makes it easy for developers to keep the third party dependencies up to date, which grew to $14k MRR before being acquired by Github in 2019. Grey’s story is a long an interesting one, so there is an extended version of this podcast available on the indie feast membership. But the best bits are here about he started out at McKinsey, before being a pivotal early employee at London FinTech GoCardless, to then cycling around the world and then coming back to accidentally launch Dependabot.👉 Extended version available on the Indie Feast membership here.What we covered in this episode
Landing a gig at consulting firm, McKinsey
Learning how to code in 6 months
Joining VC-backed GoCardless as employee 6
Growing GoCardless to 100 employees
Why Grey left after 4.5 years
Cycling around the world
Eating a petrol-ey snickers bar
Starting Dependabot as a side project
A failed launch
Doing things that don't scale
The growth inflection point - GitHub marketplace
Advice for bootstrappers
Recommendations
Book: The Design of Everyday Things
Podcast: N/A
Indie Hacker: Pete Hamilton
Follow GreyTwitterFollow Me👉 Listen to my new podcast, No More Mondays.
Twitter
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2 Hour Podcast Course
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Sponsor - Tiiny HostTiiny Host is the simplest way to host and share your web project online. It's loved by thousands of freelancers, agencies & developers across the world to quickly upload demos, landing pages or websites. Just drag & drop your web files or even a PDF to share it with the world in seconds. 👉 Try it here
5/14/2022 • 16 minutes, 15 seconds
r/SaaS moderator making $6k MRR with his own SaaS - CH Daniel, Simple.ink
Ch Daniel is the co-founder of Legit Check, an app that authenticates luxury items, that grew to $6k MRR in just a few weeks. He’s also building simple.ink, which is a simple way to make a website from Notion, it got #1 product of the day and got 1,300 users in the first month. He’s also got his finger in many SaaS pies, running the r/SaaS subreddit where he arranges AMAs and facilitates discussions with some of the biggest SaaS founders out there. As for podcasting, Daniel’s dipped in there too, with his show The Usual SaaSpects an extension of his brand. Most recently, Dan acquired Emojics.comWhat we covered in this episode:
Making $200k with an authenticator business
How does one fall into authenticating luxury items?
How Legit Check became legit
Turning a one-time purchase business to a subscription
Taking over the r/SaaS community on Reddit
Favourite AMA with Sabba and Tim from VEED
The real reason he started his podcast, The Usual SaaSpectsJames interview on The Usual SaaSpects
Does the world need another Notion web builder?
Pre-launching to build a list of 5,000
Acuiring Emojics.com
Should more indie hackers acquire businesses?
Recommendations
Book: Power of Now
Podcast: Prof G Show, Succession Pod
Indie Hacker: CH David
Follow Daniel
Twitter
Personal site
Follow Me👉 Listen to my new podcast, No More Mondays.
Twitter
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2 Hour Podcast Course
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Sponsor - Tiiny HostTiiny Host is the simplest way to host and share your web project online. It's loved by thousands of freelancers, agencies & developers across the world to quickly upload demos, landing pages or websites. Just drag & drop your web files or even a PDF to share it with the world in seconds. 👉 Try it here
5/7/2022 • 14 minutes, 42 seconds
Multiple successful exits to making lemonade - JR Farr, Lemon Squeezy
JR Farr is the co-founder of Make Lemonade, a product studio behind Lemon Squeezy (a platform to sell digital products), Dunked (to showcase your portfolio) and Iconic (a set of cracking looking apps). But this isn’t JR’s first foray into entrepreneurship. Back in 2008 he sold his first startup, College Connecting, before starting and selling another, MOJO marketplace back in 2012. From here he worked at the acquiring company for 5 years, before starting ANOTHER startup, called Weav, a product to help with customer retention. I could list out JR’s CV in more detail, but you can tell that this chap a seasoned entrepreneur.What we covered in this episode:
JR's entrepreneurship background
Building Mojo (Wordpress marketplace)
Mojo getting acquired in 2012
Why JR stayed for 5 years in a big company
Getting a mini MBA
Spending $75k on a domain for a failed company
Meeting the Make Lemonade folks
Orman Clark
Gilbert Pellegrom
Jason Schuller
Should more founders band together?
Building Lemon Squeezy
Taking on the digital products space
Going into a crowded market
Advice for entreprenuers
Recommendations
Book: The Hard Thing About Hard Things
Podcast: My First Million
Indie Hacker: Jon Yonfook
Follow JR
Twitter
Personal site
Make Lemonade Podcast
Follow Me👉 Listen to my new podcast, No More Mondays.
Twitter
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Buy A Wallet
2 Hour Podcast Course
PodPanda (hire me to edit your podcast)
Sponsor - Ramen ClubMy favourite community has just got a significant upgrade as it rebrands to Ramen Club, the best community to help you get to Ramen Profitability.Ramen club has 4 remote coworking sessions a week, masterminds, accountability calls, live AMAs, a fractional CFO, in-house VA, discounts and so much more. But most of all, the founder Charlie has done a wonderful job at cultivating a wonderfully friendly and supportive community.To join the world's most supportive community for bootstrapped founders to reach ramen profitable and beyond, head to ramenclub.so and use code "INDIEBITES" to let Charlie know I sent you and get 50% off your first month.
5/3/2022 • 16 minutes, 26 seconds
Behind the success of Trends.vc - Dru Riley, Trends
Dru Riley is the founder of Trends.vc which at its core helps people discover new ideas and markets through expertly researched reports. Trends is a bootstrapped company that makes money through it’s Trends Pro reports and community.In 2017, Dru took on a mini-retirement, sold a second home and set out with 3-5 years of savings to strike out on his own. After launching various newsletters, products and even book he eventually landed on Trends, which didn’t actually make any money for the first few months. But just 6 short months later, he was at over $20k MRR and growing fast.Now, Dru is working through the challenges of scaling a rapidly growing business and even hiring people to take over that juicy core. The reports. Here's a link to the Indie Hackers episode he did where he talks more about what went into that growth.What we covered in this episode:
Hiring for the core competency of the business, the reports
What Dru’s day-to-day looks like
Challenges with context switching
Starting Trends for fun
The idea behind framework based research
The first Trends report on cloud kitchens
How does Dru decide on topics for Trends
Choosing to persevere with Trends
Launching a community
How comfort challenges led to Trends success
When to stop projects
What Dru does for fun
Recommendations
Book: Sapiens, Caste
Podcast: Founders
Indie Hacker: Pat Walls
Follow Dru
Twitter
Personal site
Follow Me👉 Listen to my new podcast, No More Mondays.
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
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2 Hour Podcast Course
PodPanda (hire me to edit your podcast)
Sponsor - AhrefsThank you to Ahrefs for sponsoring Indie Bites. Ahrefs is the most complete and valuable SEO tool on the market. Bootstrapped companies such as VEED and Transistor have used Ahrefs extensively to understand how to craft their SEO strategies, which have been such a pivotal part of their growth.If you want to get more traffic from Google on your side-project, I’d recommend first trying out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools for free. You’ll see what keywords your pages are ranking for, understand how Google sees your content and discover what changes you need to improve your search ranking. You should also check out their YouTube channel to understand both the basics of SEO and some more advanced techniques.To try out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools, head to ahrefs.com/awt.
Monica Lent is a founder running 3 profitable indie businesses after leaving her full time job 2 years ago. She runs Affilimate, a SaaS product which allows you to manage and track affiliate commissions, the Blogging for Devs newsletter and paid community for developers looking to grow an audience and finally, Not a Nomad, a travel blog that accounted for almost 50% of Monica’s revenue last year, as she grew her portfolio of projects from $30k to over $100k.What we covered in this episode:
How Monica splits time between her projects
Is it detrimental having split attention?
Delegating and outsourcing as an indie hacker
How content and SEO ties her projects together
Benefits of a VA
Starting a blog that makes thousands
Having a travel blog during covid
Starting a community for developers
How to start your own successful blog
The downsides of sharing revenue numbers
Is Monica having fun?
Recommendations
Book: Founding Sales
Podcast: Tropical MBA
Indie Hacker: Josh Ho
Follow Monica
Twitter
2021 Retro on personal site
SEO Course
Follow Me👉 Listen to my new podcast, No More Mondays.
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
2 Hour Podcast Course
PodPanda (hire me to edit your podcast)
Sponsor - AhrefsThank you to Ahrefs for sponsoring Indie Bites. Ahrefs is the most complete and valuable SEO tool on the market. Bootstrapped companies such as VEED and Transistor have used Ahrefs extensively to understand how to craft their SEO strategies, which have been such a pivotal part of their growth.If you want to get more traffic from Google on your side-project, I’d recommend first trying out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools for free. You’ll see what keywords your pages are ranking for, understand how Google sees your content and discover what changes you need to improve your search ranking. You should also check out their YouTube channel to understand both the basics of SEO and some more advanced techniques.To try out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools, head to ahrefs.com/awt.
4/26/2022 • 15 minutes, 17 seconds
Growing ScrapingBee to $1m ARR - Pierre De Wulf, ScrapingBee
Pierre De Wulf is the co-founder of ScrapingBee a web scraping API that grew to $1M ARR in 2 years. Before starting ScrapingBee, Pierre and his co-founder Kevin had quit their jobs to follow the indie dream. 9 months later, their product PricingBot couldn’t generate the traction they were hoping for so they sold the business and pivoted to ScrapingBee.What we covered in this episode:
Pierre's background; inspiration from his father
Running a business within World of Warcraft
Meeting his co-founder, Kevin
Starting a project for his girlfriend
Leaving his job to work on something for 9 months
Knowing when to stop and move on
Starting and selling PricingBot
How to sell a failed company
Using SEO as a marketing channel
How to write SEO content effectively
Starting ScrapingBee
How ScrapingBee grew so quickly
Taking TinySeed funding
Recommendations
Book: Hello Startup
Podcast: My First Million
Indie Hacker: Matt Wensing
Follow Pierre
Twitter
Personal site
Follow Me👉 Listen to my new podcast, No More Mondays.
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
2 Hour Podcast Course
PodPanda (hire me to edit your podcast)
Sponsor - AhrefsThank you to Ahrefs for sponsoring Indie Bites. Ahrefs is the most complete and valuable SEO tool on the market. Bootstrapped companies such as VEED and Transistor have used Ahrefs extensively to understand how to craft their SEO strategies, which have been such a pivotal part of their growth.If you want to get more traffic from Google on your side-project, I’d recommend first trying out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools for free. You’ll see what keywords your pages are ranking for, understand how Google sees your content and discover what changes you need to improve your search ranking. You should also check out their YouTube channel to understand both the basics of SEO and some more advanced techniques.To try out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools, head to ahrefs.com/awt.
4/22/2022 • 14 minutes, 34 seconds
Bootstrapping Testimonial to $13k MRR after many failed products - Damon Chen, Testimonial
Damon Chen, who is the founder of Testimonial, a product that collects video testimonials that he launched back in December 2020, and has grown it to $13k MRR since then. Damon quit his stable job of 8 years at Cisco to pursue his dream of building a better life for himself as an indie hacker. This didn’t come easily for Damon, as he launched several products which made 0 revenue before hitting big with Testimonial. He’s also built some other fantastic products, such as embed.so and channel.so, as well as acquiring Supportman off fellow Indie Hacker Noah Bragg.What we covered in this episode:
Damon's failed startup attempts
Why he builds for fun
Quitting his job and pivoting to Testimonial
Using code from other projects
How he went from 0 to 3k in 3 days
Damon's approach to validation
Growth tactics used to get to $13k MRR
Having other projects for fun (Embed and Channel)
Acquiring Supportman
Growing his Twitter to 30k
Recommendations
Book: Getting Acquired
Podcast: My First Million
Indie Hacker: Pieter Levels
Follow Damon
Twitter
Damon's blog
Follow Me👉 Listen to my new podcast, No More Mondays.
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
2 Hour Podcast Course
Sponsor - PodQueueThis podcast is brought to you by PodQueue. Don't you hate when you find something you just want to bookmark and listen to later as a podcast, but there's no easy way to do it? Try PodQueue, and you can save audio from anywhere around the web and easily listen to it later in the podcast app you already use. PodQueue works with links from YouTube, Soundcloud, Apple Podcasts, NPR, the BBC, and more! There’s a 15-day free trial, and it’s just $5 per month afterwards, with no credit card required at signup. Use promo code “INDIEBITES” at signup to get an extra month free!👉 Try it here
4/19/2022 • 15 minutes, 49 seconds
Building a mentorship platform to $1m GMV - Dominic Monn, MentorCruise
Dominic Monn is the founder of MentorCruise, a marketplace that connect mentors and mentees in Tech, which is currently doing $15k in monthly revenue and processed over $1m through the platform. Previously, Domm was a Machine Learning engineer at Doist, a job that he left in Feb '22 to pursue MentorCruise full time.What we covered in this episode:
Why Dom left his full-time job at Doist
How going full-time has impacted MentorCruise
What Dom’s day-to-day looks like
Not feeling guilty about unproductive hobbies
How Dom’s discovered mentorship through Udacity
Taking 5 months to build an MVP
Why validation wouldn’t work for MentorCruise
How it took 3 months to get his first paying customer
Why he decided to push through regardless
How persistence pays off
Why building a business is like building a muscle
How programmatic SEO works
Recommendations
Book: Built to Sell
Podcast: My First Million
Indie Hacker: Julian Canlas
Follow Dom
Twitter
Hire him as a mentor
Personal site
Follow Me👉 Listen to my new podcast, No More Mondays.
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
2 Hour Podcast Course
Sponsor - AhrefsThank you to Ahrefs for sponsoring Indie Bites. Ahrefs is the most complete and valuable SEO tool on the market. Bootstrapped companies such as VEED and Transistor have used Ahrefs extensively to understand how to craft their SEO strategies, which have been such a pivotal part of their growth.If you want to get more traffic from Google on your side-project, I’d recommend first trying out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools for free. You’ll see what keywords your pages are ranking for, understand how Google sees your content and discover what changes you need to improve your search ranking. You should also check out their YouTube channel to understand both the basics of SEO and some more advanced techniques.To try out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools, head to ahrefs.com/awt.
4/15/2022 • 15 minutes, 13 seconds
Bootstrapping vs venture capital & lessons from a veteran - Spencer Fry, Podia
Today I’m joined by Spencer Fry, founder of Podia, a platform helping creators make a living online through selling courses, digital downloads, webinars and more. 7 years in, they have a 35 person team and have an awesome product for creators. But this isn’t Spencer’s first rodeo, bootstrapping and exiting 3 businesses between 2003 and 2014, notably Carbonmade and TypeFrag. What’s interesting about Spencer is that he's actually raised funding for Podia, and I wanted to find out why a seasoned bootstrapper like Spencer went down this route, and if it’s a an option that more indie hackers should consider.👉 50 minute version of this conversation.What we covered in this episode:
Why Spencer raised funding for Podia
Why you should look at funding as a tool
Beer ≠ funding
3 interesting predictions on the creator economy
Spencer’s article with those predictions
Bonus: Spencer’s famous vodka pasta dish
Opportunities to build in the creator economy
Why entrepreneurs are different gravy
Solo founder vs co-founder
Recommendations
Book: Ben Horowitz Book 1 / Book 2
Podcast: Axios Today / All In Pod
Indie Hacker / entrepreneur: Tobi Lutke
Follow Spencer
Twitter
Personal Blog
Follow Me👉 Listen to my new podcast, No More Mondays.
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
2 Hour Podcast Course
Sponsor - AhrefsThank you to Ahrefs for sponsoring Indie Bites. Ahrefs is the most complete and valuable SEO tool on the market. Bootstrapped companies such as VEED and Transistor have used Ahrefs extensively to understand how to craft their SEO strategies, which have been such a pivotal part of their growth.If you want to get more traffic from Google on your side-project, I’d recommend first trying out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools for free. You’ll see what keywords your pages are ranking for, understand how Google sees your content and discover what changes you need to improve your search ranking. You should also check out their YouTube channel to understand both the basics of SEO and some more advanced techniques.To try out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools, head to ahrefs.com/awt.
4/12/2022 • 15 minutes, 17 seconds
Why your product needs marketing - Dagobert Renouf, Logology
Dagobert Renouf is the founder of Logoloy, a logo and brand design service that he started with his wife, doing around $3k in monthly revenue. This is an awesome story. Dago started building Logoloy in September 2018, then completely failed the launch after building for almost 2 years. It wasn't until May 21 that Dago realised he actually needed to find a marketing channel that worked for him -which was Twitter. Dago went for 15 years chasing money, but then realised that wasn’t the course to happiness. So after a turbulent few years, he’s now in a place of fulfilment, with plenty of the journey to go.👉 Extended episode here.What we covered in this episode:
Making his first internet money in high school
Getting a cease and desist at 15 years old
The dangers of being focused on money
Finding the idea for Logology
Taking 1.5 years to launch his startup
Having a failed launch after 1.5 years of building
Marketing when you don’t want to do marketing
Discovering a distribution channel that works - Twitter
Growing to $3k per month
Recommendations
Book: Zero to One by Peter Thiel
Podcast: Wannabe Entreprenuer
Indie Hacker: Tony Dihn
Follow Dago
Twitter
Logology
Follow Me👉 Listen to my new podcast, No More Mondays.
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
2 Hour Podcast Course
Sponsor - AhrefsThank you to Ahrefs for sponsoring Indie Bites. Ahrefs is the most complete and valuable SEO tool on the market. Bootstrapped companies such as VEED and Transistor have used Ahrefs extensively to understand how to craft their SEO strategies, which have been such a pivotal part of their growth.If you want to get more traffic from Google on your side-project, I’d recommend first trying out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools for free. You’ll see what keywords your pages are ranking for, understand how Google sees your content and discover what changes you need to improve your search ranking. You should also check out their YouTube channel to understand both the basics of SEO and some more advanced techniques.To try out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools, head to ahrefs.com/awt.
4/8/2022 • 15 minutes, 35 seconds
Bootstrapping a portfolio of SaaS products to $3k MRR - Jim Raptis, BrandBird
Jim Raptis, an indie hacker from Greece who is working full-time on his portfolio of projects, including BrandBird and Magic Pattern, which are both doing $1,500 MRR. If you’ve seen those cool screenshots on Twitter with the nice drop shadow and gradient background, those are made with Brand Bird. What we covered in this episode
Quitting running a funded startup for indie hacking
Earning that first dollar
Learning design as an engineer
Launching a product with less than 300 followers
Choosing to do a portfolio of small bets
Splitting time between multiple projects
How Jim went grew from 300 to 9k Twitter followers
What do to do when things aren’t going so well
Recommendations
Book: Traction by Gabriel Weinberg and Justin Mares
Podcast: Flow State
Indie Hacker: Peter Levels
Follow Jim
Twitter
Personal Site
Follow Me👉 Listen to my new podcast, No More Mondays.
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
2 Hour Podcast Course
Sponsor - TestimonialTestimonial allows you to easily collect testimonials from your customers and automatically embeds them on your landing page.You might have seen a wall of love with a bunch of supportive Tweets and videos on various products you’ve signed up for. That wall is created using Damon Chen’s product Testimonial. All you have to do is sign up, paste the nice things people have said about you and it will generate a beautiful set of testimonials that you can easily embed on your site or share online.Head to Testimonial.to o to create your Twitter wall of love for free. If you want to sign up for a paid plan, get a whopping 25% off for 12 months with the code “INDIEBITES” at checkout.
4/4/2022 • 15 minutes, 30 seconds
Candle dealer builds $5k MRR software to solve own problem - Dianna Allen & Jeremy Blalock, Inventora
In this episode I’ve got my first ever returning guest with Dianna Allen and first ever double act as we’re joined by her fiance Jeremy Blalock. I spoke to Dianna about a year ago after growing her handmade candle business from $100 to $50k in that year. Since then Dianna is still running TERRA and doubled the revenue in 2021, but has also co-founded Inventora which has just hit $5k MRR. Inventora is inventory tracking system for handmade businesses, solving Dianna’s own problem with TERRA.👉 Join the Indie Feast membership here.What we covered in this episode:
How TERRA is going
Handmade business vs SaaS business. Which is better?
Solving her own problem with TERRA to build Inventora
Spreadsheet to SaaS
Asking Jeremy (Dianna’s partner) to build the product
Growing without paying for ads
Leveraging existing relationships
Choosing to raise a small funding round
Why raise money if you’re an indie hacker?
Spending $25,000 on a domain
Tactics for growing to $5k MRR
Hiring a videographer to make a documentary
Recommendations
Books: The Innovation Stack, The Gardeners Almanack
Podcasts: Acquired, The Product Boss
Indie Hackers: Elon Musk, Jon Yongfook
Follow Dianna & Jeremy
Dianna's Twitter
Jeremy's Twitter
Inventora Instagram
TERRA Instagram
Follow Me👉 Listen to my new podcast, No More Mondays.
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
2 Hour Podcast Course
Sponsor - AhrefsThank you to Ahrefs for sponsoring Indie Bites. Ahrefs is the most complete and valuable SEO tool on the market. Bootstrapped companies such as VEED and Transistor have used Ahrefs extensively to understand how to craft their SEO strategies, which have been such a pivotal part of their growth.If you want to get more traffic from Google on your side-project, I’d recommend first trying out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools for free. You’ll see what keywords your pages are ranking for, understand how Google sees your content and discover what changes you need to improve your search ranking. You should also check out their YouTube channel to understand both the basics of SEO and some more advanced techniques.To try out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools, head to ahrefs.com/awt.
3/27/2022 • 15 minutes, 43 seconds
Gumroad founder's framework for a bootstrapped business - Sahil Lavingia, Gumroad
Sahil Lavingia is the founder of Gumroad, the platform that allows creators to sell products online. The beating heart of the creator economy. You'll likely have heard Sahil's story about his failure to build a billion dollar company with an article that went viral, but let me summarise for those that haven't.Sahil founded Gumroad in 2011, aiming to build the next unicorn, leaving Pinterest where he was employee #2. He raised $1.1m from angels, then $7m more in 2012. Things started growing, then they didn't. Sahil laid off 75% of the company to keep the product alive, moved to Provo, Utah to figure where to take Gumroad from that point. Almost a decade later Gumroad is growing quicker than ever, making millions in revenue and helping creators make a living online.Sahil has just launched his book, The Minimalist Entrepreneur, where he shares a decade of learnings on how to build a profitable, sustainable business and how entrepreneurs can do more with less to make more impact on the world.👉 I'm giving away 5 copies of Sahil's book on Twitter, enter here.What we covered on this episode:
Sahil’s approach to funding
Bootstrapping vs VC
Why Gumroad runs so differently to most companies
Why longevity has helped Gumroad
Sahil’s book: The Minimalist Entrepreneur
Building a project in a weekend: Verification Letters
Livestream of building Verification Letters
The framework for starting a business
Why you should start and then learn
Barriers people have to starting their business
Fear of failure
Importance of writing
Recommendations
Book: Predictably Irrational by Dan Ariely
Podcast: All-In Podcast
Indie Hacker: Naval
Follow Sahil
Twitter
Website
Follow Me👉 Listen to my new podcast, No More Mondays.
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Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
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2 Hour Podcast Course
Sponsor - ilo AnalyticsSahil has 280k followers on Twitter and he sure knows the tweets that will engage his audience. If you too want to get a deeper understanding of what engages your followers on Twitter, you should check out ilo Analytics.ilo helps you easily see which kind of tweets get more impressions, likes, profile clicks and more so you can get grow your Twitter audience. ilo's has beautiful graphs for the most important metrics for both tweets and threads will be sure to help you build your following.Head to ilo.so or hit the link in the show notes and use the code INDIEBITES to get 25% off your ilo subscription for life.
3/16/2022 • 15 minutes, 7 seconds
A solo $130k MRR productized design service - Brett Williams, Designjoy
Brett Williams is the founder of Designjoy, a one-man productised design service that is doing over $130k MRR, charging clients up to $5k a month for unlimited design. You indeed hear that right, Brett is running a million dollar business solo with over 40 clients.What we covered in this episode:
$50k per year with a Tumblr blog
Dropping out of college and getting a regular job
How Brett started Designjoy
Being inspired by Design Pickle
Launching Designjoy
Taking 3 years to get to $10k MRR
Non-traditional marketing and growth methods
Launching Scribbles, a side project
What does into a good landing page?
Different routes to success
Waiting till $80k to quit his job
Should entrepreneurs be more risk-adverse?
How run a successful 1-man productised service?
Recommendations
Book: Company of One
Podcast: The Dave Ramsey Show
Indie Hacker: Suhail
Follow Brett
Twitter
Instagram
Follow Me👉 Listen to my new podcast, No More Mondays.
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Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
2 Hour Podcast Course
Sponsor - AhrefsThank you to Ahrefs for sponsoring Indie Bites. Ahrefs is the most complete and valuable SEO tool on the market. Bootstrapped companies such as VEED and Transistor have used Ahrefs extensively to understand how to craft their SEO strategies, which have been such a pivotal part of their growth.If you want to get more traffic from Google on your side-project, I’d recommend first trying out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools for free. You’ll see what keywords your pages are ranking for, understand how Google sees your content and discover what changes you need to improve your search ranking. You should also check out their YouTube channel to understand both the basics of SEO and some more advanced techniques.To try out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools, head to ahrefs.com/awt.
3/14/2022 • 15 minutes, 36 seconds
Growing an online card tool to $23k a month - Valentin Hinov, Thankbox
Val Hinov is the founder of Thankbox an online group card tool that grew to $20k p/m throughout lockdown. Now Val is facing the challenges of what to do when your product scales, what to do when the wave that brought you success starts to slow and when your product has one-time purchase pricing model.What we covered in this episode:
Where the idea for Thankbox came from?
Lessons learned from a failed startup
How he built Thankbox in 2 months
How he got his first users for Thankbox
Building a virality model
Using Google Ads to grow quickly
Advice for people apprehensive of using ads
Why social ads didn’t work
The effect of a one-off purchase pricing model
Having a big drop in usersIndie Hackers Pod
The seasonality of online cards
Outsourcing vs solo
When to go full-time
Recommendations
Book: Atomic Habits
Podcast: The Revolutions Podcast
Indie Hacker: Andrea Bosoni
Follow Val
Twitter
PersonalSite
Thankbox
Follow Me👉 Listen to my new podcast, No More Mondays.
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Indie Bites Twitter
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2 Hour Podcast Course
Sponsor - 4dayweek.ioAs indie hackers we’re always trying to squeeze extra hours in our day to work on our side projects. What about if you had a whole extra day to work on your projects, while still getting a full-time salary?4dayweek.io is the place to get a Software Job with a better work-life balance. All jobs have a 4 day work week contract and most are only 32 hours per week. Find the best remote tech jobs from companies with a great work-life balance at 4dayweek.io or hit the link in the show notes.👉 Try it here.
3/7/2022 • 14 minutes, 45 seconds
Building a $15m GMV side-project at 15 years old - Che Sampat, SuperPay
Che Sampat is an 18 year old Indie Hacker who built SuperPay in 2019 when he was 15 years old, an app that lets you generate easy payment links through Stripe and Square. Since then he's grown it to 5k users, $6k in revenue and processed a whopping $15m in payments. Che has also been working at some cool companies since he was young, recently joining the payments startup Fast to focus on his career, therefore stepping back from SuperPay.What we covered in this episode
How Che got into coding
Building his first app in year 9 computer science
How Che learnt to code with YouTube
The story of building SuperPay
Starting his first company at 15
Balancing indie hacking and school
Success without idea validation
Launching on Product Hunt with no plan
How did Che get his first users
Growing to $15m GMV
Did Che buy himself anything nice?
Getting in trouble with Stripe building SuperPortal
Challenges of being an 18yr old indie hacker
Why Che got himself an engineering job instead of pursuing SuperPay
Recommendations
Book: Clean Code
Podcast: Software Engineering Daily
Indie Hacker: Peter Grillet
Follow CheTwitterFollow Me👉 Listen to my new podcast, No More Mondays.
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Indie Bites Twitter
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2 Hour Podcast Course
Sponsor - Reel.soReel lets you create these short teaser videos (called audiograms), with animated subtitles, waveforms and a ton of beautiful templates to choose from. Save time and set your podcast clips aside from the rest by creating these sharable snippets that grab your audience's attention as they scroll through their feed. even without sound.I've used Reel myself for Indie Bites and it's been a game changer for me. If you want to give it a go for yourself, head to reel.so or click the link in your show notes and use the code INDIEBITES for 20% off.👉 Try it here.
2/25/2022 • 15 minutes, 42 seconds
Mental health as a founder and the importance of community - Tom Ross, Design Cuts
In this episode we’re joined by Tom Ross, who is the founder of Design Cuts, a marketplace and community for creatives which he’s grown to a team of 20 over the past decade. Tom is also a seasoned podcaster, co-hosting The Honest Designer's Show and Biz Buds which have been downloaded millions of times.It's not all been plain sailing for Tom as he ran into severe burnout working 18 hour days, 7 days a week for 18 months, leading to him being hospitalised. In this episode we're going to find out more about Tom's story, some of his successes and failures in business, along advice he'd give to founders from his experiences.👉 Get the extended version of this podcast on membership, available for £4 a month.What we covered in this episode:
Tom’s backstoryLink to pod episode
Starting an Interpol forum
Earning more money at home at 16 than in his job
Growing a design blog to 15 million visitors
Growing Design Cuts in the early days
10 years later, 20 employees, millions of revenue
Mental health and burnout as a founderLink to Tom’s burnout story
How to build good routines to avoid burnout
How community can help with your mental health
Why community is so important
How to build a community
Recommendations
Book: Thank You Economy by Gary Vee
Podcast: Diary of a CEO
Indie Hacker: Rosie Sherry
Follow Tom
Twitter
Instagram
LinkedIn
Website
Follow Me👉 Listen to my new podcast, No More Mondays.
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Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
2 Hour Podcast Course
Sponsor - AhrefsThank you to Ahrefs for sponsoring Indie Bites. Ahrefs is the most complete and valuable SEO tool on the market. Bootstrapped companies such as VEED and Transistor have used Ahrefs extensively to understand how to craft their SEO strategies, which have been such a pivotal part of their growth.If you want to get more traffic from Google on your side-project, I’d recommend first trying out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools for free. You’ll see what keywords your pages are ranking for, understand how Google sees your content and discover what changes you need to improve your search ranking. You should also check out their YouTube channel to understand both the basics of SEO and some more advanced techniques.To try out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools, head to ahrefs.com/awt.
2/8/2022 • 15 minutes, 34 seconds
Growing to $8.5k MRR in 1 year - Marie Martens, Tally.so
Marie Martens the co-founder of Tally, an easy way to create forms online. She left her stable marketing job to start Tally with her partner in crime Filip and became an indie hacker. Since then they've grown Tally to over 16,000 users almost $10k MRR as they work towards becoming default alive. Through a mix of manual prospecting, a successful product hunt launch and product-led growth, they’ve turned Tally into an exceptional indie success story.-> Subscribe to my brand new podcast, No More Mondays, co-hosted with Dan Rowden here.What we covered in this episode:
The origin story of TallyIndie Hackers episode
A failed startup, Hotspot
How COVID crushed their first startup
How Tally got their first few users
Doing things that don’t scale
How I became Tally’s first paying customer
Biggest source of sign ups for tally
The benefits of product-led growth
How to do an effective PH launch
Going from 3,000 - 12,000 users without paid ads
Why Marie quit her job to bootstrap
Would she ever go back to a job
What it’s like building your dream startup
Recommendations
Book: Intercom on Marketing
Podcast: Indie Hackers
Indie Hacker: Davis Baer
Follow MarieTwitterFollow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
2 Hour Podcast Course
Sponsor - AhrefsThank you to Ahrefs for sponsoring Indie Bites. Ahrefs is the most complete and valuable SEO tool on the market. Bootstrapped companies such as VEED and Transistor have used Ahrefs extensively to understand how to craft their SEO strategies, which have been such a pivotal part of their growth.If you want to get more traffic from Google on your side-project, I’d recommend first trying out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools for free. You’ll see what keywords your pages are ranking for, understand how Google sees your content and discover what changes you need to improve your search ranking. You should also check out their YouTube channel to understand both the basics of SEO and some more advanced techniques.To try out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools, head to ahrefs.com/awt.
2/3/2022 • 14 minutes, 46 seconds
Growing to $4m+ despite Apple cloning their product - Matt Ronge, Astropad
Matt Ronge is the co-founder and CEO at Astropad, a product that turns your iPad into a second screen both on Windows and Mac, started back in 2015. Back in 2019, their business was almost destroyed when Apple launched a feature that almost made Astropad defunct. What did this lead Matt and his team to do? Pivot and find a new idea? Lay off the team? Absolutely not. They doubled down on their product. Through challenges with big tech, raising kickstarter funding and building physical products, Matt has been on quite the journey with Astropad and we’re going to dive into all of that today, along with a mini-masterclass on PR.What we covered in this episode:
Origins of Astropad
Having two technical co-founders
How they tackled marketing with no prior knowledge
Most useful books to learn the basics
22 Immutable Laws of Marketing
Burned Out Blogger's Guide to PR
How Matt leveraged PR in the early days
How indie hackers can use PR for their projects
Size of Astropad in 2022
Why they built a hardware product
How to get into building hardware
The benefits of hardware products
How Apple stole their product
How they saved their business after being crushed by Apple
Recommendations
Book: Radical Candour, The Making of a Manager
Podcast: Dithering
Indie Hacker: Monica Lent
Follow Matt
Twitter
Astropad Podcast
Follow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
2 Hour Podcast Course
Sponsor - AhrefsThank you to Ahrefs for sponsoring Indie Bites. Ahrefs is the most complete and valuable SEO tool on the market. Bootstrapped companies such as VEED and Transistor have used Ahrefs extensively to understand how to craft their SEO strategies, which have been such a pivotal part of their growth.If you want to get more traffic from Google on your side-project, I’d recommend first trying out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools for free. You’ll see what keywords your pages are ranking for, understand how Google sees your content and discover what changes you need to improve your search ranking. You should also check out their YouTube channel to understand both the basics of SEO and some more advanced techniques.To try out Ahrefs Webmaster Tools, head to ahrefs.com/awt.
1/29/2022 • 16 minutes, 49 seconds
Bootstrapping a SaaS to millions in revenue - Ben Orenstein, Tuple
Ben Orenstein is the founder of Tuple, a tool for remote pair programmers that has been steadily growing for the past few years. Now, Ben runs Tuple with a small team and is delving into what happens when your SaaS starts to hit scale. You might have also heard Ben's voice on the Art of Product podcast, which he co-hosts with Derrick Reimer, founder of SavvyCal, talking about the behind the scenes of running their respective SaaS companies.What we covered in this episode:
Why Tuple is the most successful product he’s made
How Ben’s approach to enterprise sales has changed
How much revenue comes from enterprise sales
How the enterprise product is differentiated
How indie hackers can sell to bigger companies
Where Tuple gets it’s customers from
What does Ben’s day-to-day look like?
Has he just built himself a job?
The benefits of making a podcast
Some of Ben’s favourite previous products
Recommendations
Book: The Mom Test
Podcast: Bootstrapped Web
Indie Hacker: Adam Wathan
Follow Ben
Twitter
Blog
Follow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
2 Hour Podcast Course
Sponsor - Fathom AnalyticsFor the longest time, website analytics software was seriously bad. It was hard to understand, time-consuming to use, and worse, it exploited visitor data for big tech to profit. I've spent countless hours in Google Analytics dashboards trying to figure even out the most basic metrics.This is exactly why I signed up for Fathom as soon as I heard Paul Jarvis and Jack Ellis were building it.Fathom is simple website analytics that doesn't suck. It's easy to use and respectful of privacy laws, with no cookies following your users around the web. They're also a bootstrapped, sustainable business so I love supporting them. Yes, it might feel strange paying for analytics at first, but once you realise the real cost of free Google Analytics and realising how easy to use Fathom is, you won't go back. You can install the lightweight code on as many websites as you want and quickly see the performance of all your sites.Link → https://usefathom.com/bites
1/24/2022 • 15 minutes, 43 seconds
4 years of failed projects to full-time indie hacker - Kenneth Cassel, Pointer.gg
Today I’m joined by Kenneth Cassel the founder of Pointer.gg a product he pivoted from Slip.so, a course platform making it easy for developers to make high-quality interactive courses. He got inspiration for Slip when he built vim.so, a course made $10k in just one month with - his first internet money. It's not all been plain sailing for Kenneth, as he struggled with failing his way to eventual success, with 4 years building products with no revenue. Now with Slip, he's quit his job, been accepted to YC and gets to build a company he’s always wanted to have.What we covered in this episode:
How buying a Raspberry Pi changed Kenneth's life
Going from maintenance man for a gas station to software engineer
The inspiration Kenneth took from his Dad
How he learned programming
Making $100 in 4 years of side projects
How to stay motivated when things aren't going so well
Going from 0-20k Twitter followers
How building in public impacted Kenneth
Earning $10k in one month with Vim.so
Why he started Slip.so
Dealing with imposter syndrome
Recommendations
Book: Hell Yeah or No by Derek Sivers
Podcast: My First Million
Indie Hacker: The Builder JR
Follow KennethTwitterFollow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
2 Hour Podcast Course
Sponsor - Fathom AnalyticsFor the longest time, website analytics software was seriously bad. It was hard to understand, time-consuming to use, and worse, it exploited visitor data for big tech to profit. I've spent countless hours in Google Analytics dashboards trying to figure even out the most basic metrics.This is exactly why I signed up for Fathom as soon as I heard Paul Jarvis and Jack Ellis were building it.Fathom is simple website analytics that doesn't suck. It's easy to use and respectful of privacy laws, with no cookies following your users around the web. They're also a bootstrapped, sustainable business so I love supporting them. Yes, it might feel strange paying for analytics at first, but once you realise the real cost of free Google Analytics and realising how easy to use Fathom is, you won't go back. You can install the lightweight code on as many websites as you want and quickly see the performance of all your sites.Link → https://usefathom.com/bites
1/15/2022 • 15 minutes, 58 seconds
Nailing your marketing as a founder - Peter Suhm, Reform
Peter Suhm is the co-founder of Reform, a tool that lets you easily create simple, brandable forms. Peter is also part of the Tiny Seed 1st batch, where he was working on a product called branch Branch. After that didn't work out, he went through a period of testing and validating ideas.One of those ideas was a investor update tool, where Peter discovered how convoluted creating a form with existing tools was. Using Twitter and a very early stage MVP, he validated the idea for Reform and got to work building.Since then he's had #1 Product of the Week on Product Hunt and is now working through the challenges of building features and growing revenue. You might have also heard Peter on the Out of Beta podcast, which he co-hosts with Matt Wensing.➡️ Get the uncut, 30 minute conversation with Peter on the Indie Bites membership here.What we covered in this episode:
Coming up with the idea for Reform
Validating the idea for Reform
Why build a product in such a competitive market
Where form builders keep messing up
Getting to #1 Product Hunt of the week
When is the right time to launch on PH
Marketing and growth tests for Reform going forward
Continuing to try things that don't scale
Where should founders start with marketing?
Peter's approach to product development
The feedback loop of Twitter
The upsides of raising Tiny Seed money
Recommendations
Book: Traction by Gabriel Weinberg
Podcast: Tropical MBA
Indie Hacker: Derrick Reimer
Follow Peter
Twitter
Personal Site
Follow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
2 Hour Podcast Course
Sponsor - Fathom AnalyticsFor the longest time, website analytics software was seriously bad. It was hard to understand, time-consuming to use, and worse, it exploited visitor data for big tech to profit. I've spent countless hours in Google Analytics dashboards trying to figure even out the most basic metrics.This is exactly why I signed up for Fathom as soon as I heard Paul Jarvis and Jack Ellis were building it.Fathom is simple website analytics that doesn't suck. It's easy to use and respectful of privacy laws, with no cookies following your users around the web. They're also a bootstrapped, sustainable business so I love supporting them. Yes, it might feel strange paying for analytics at first, but once you realise the real cost of free Google Analytics and realising how easy to use Fathom is, you won't go back. You can install the lightweight code on as many websites as you want and quickly see the performance of all your sites.Link → https://usefathom.com/bites
11/18/2021 • 15 minutes, 34 seconds
From lifelong bootstrapper to raising calm funding - Brian Casel, ZipMessage
Brian Casel is a veteran of the bootstrapping game, having left his full-time job back in 2008. You might have heard him on the Boostrapped Web podcast where he shares his journey starting and building software products. Over the years Brian has pretty much done it all, built software businesses, courses, productized services and even sold some along the way. Most recently, Brian has been working on ZipMessage, a new way to communicate asynchronously.➡️ Get the uncut, 60 minute recording with Brian on the Indie Feast membership here.What we covered in this episode:
Where did the idea of ZipMessage come from?
How Brian validated ZipMessage
Brian's unconventional approach to validation
Why Brian raised funding from Calm Company Fund
How can people go from freelancer to productized service
The importance of building processes in productized services
Why Brian didn't follow his passion for music
Recommendations
Book: Shoe Dog by Phil Knight
Podcast: Smartless
Indie Hacker: James McKinven (errm...)
Follow Brian
Twitter
Personal Site
Follow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
2 Hour Podcast Course
Sponsor - Fathom AnalyticsFor the longest time, website analytics software was seriously bad. It was hard to understand, time-consuming to use, and worse, it exploited visitor data for big tech to profit. I've spent countless hours in Google Analytics dashboards trying to figure even out the most basic metrics.This is exactly why I signed up for Fathom as soon as I heard Paul Jarvis and Jack Ellis were building it.Fathom is simple website analytics that doesn't suck. It's easy to use and respectful of privacy laws, with no cookies following your users around the web. They're also a bootstrapped, sustainable business so I love supporting them. Yes, it might feel strange paying for analytics at first, but once you realise the real cost of free Google Analytics and realising how easy to use Fathom is, you won't go back. You can install the lightweight code on as many websites as you want and quickly see the performance of all your sites.Link → https://usefathom.com/bites
11/13/2021 • 15 minutes, 41 seconds
Leaving a $500k job to build a portfolio of small bets - Daniel Vassallo
In 2019 Daniel Vassallo left his $500k salaried job at Amazon to go indie. In the 2 years since he left Daniel has placed many small bets, something he's become known for. In particular Daniel has seen success from his Info Products and building his audience on Twitter, which has grown from 0 to 91k. He wrote a short book on the good parts of AWS, which has made $126,000, then following the Twitter growth, wrote a book called Everyone Can Build a Twitter Audience, which has made $244,000. He shares all of his revenue reports in his Profit and Loss community, which in itself has made over $30k in the past year. In total, and in just over 2 years, Daniel has made $570k in revenue and $306k in profit since leaving his job at Amazon. But he's gained something he didn't have while working for someone else, freedom.➡️ Get the uncut, 80 minute recording with Daniel on the Indie Feast membership here.What we covered in this episode:
Leaving a $500k job at Amazon to go Indie
The trap of judging your life based on financial value
Why the initial focusing on one product didn't work out for Daniel
Where the small bets mindset originated
How to deal with context switching with small bets
Dealing with an uncertain income
Why info products work well for a small bets strategy
How book publishers work and how we can apply their methods
The importance of the "small" in small bets
How you can build a twitter audience like Daniel
Why Daniel started making wooden cutting boards
How he made $2,600 from one tweet
Recommendations
Book: Anti Fragile by Nassim Taleb
Podcast: Indie Hackers
Indie Hacker: Peter Askew
More on Daniel
Twitter
On the IH pod
His most popular articles
Follow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
2 Hour Podcast Course
Sponsor - Fathom AnalyticsFor the longest time, website analytics software was seriously bad. It was hard to understand, time-consuming to use, and worse, it exploited visitor data for big tech to profit. I've spent countless hours in Google Analytics dashboards trying to figure even out the most basic metrics.This is exactly why I signed up for Fathom as soon as I heard Paul Jarvis and Jack Ellis were building it.Fathom is simple website analytics that doesn't suck. It's easy to use and respectful of privacy laws, with no cookies following your users around the web. They're also a bootstrapped, sustainable business so I love supporting them. Yes, it might feel strange paying for analytics at first, but once you realise the real cost of free Google Analytics and realising how easy to use Fathom is, you won't go back. You can install the lightweight code on as many websites as you want and quickly see the performance of all your sites.Link → https://usefathom.com/bites
11/8/2021 • 16 minutes, 24 seconds
From $500k to $1m in 6 months with a podcast agency - Harry Morton, Lowerstreet
Harry Morton is the founder of Lower Street Media, a podcast production agency that specialises in premium podcasts for ambitious companies. Lower Street are the agency behind top shows such as Secret Leaders, Technology Untangled and WFH Daily. Harry's business has skyrocketed since COVID, doubling in size of revenue and headcount in the last 6-months as more companies start to realise how effective podcasting can be. Harry also runs Single Track Conf, a 3-day mountain-biking founder retreat.➡️ Here's my course on starting a podcast in 2 hours or less (use "bites" for $10 off)What we covered in this episode:
Why start an agency? it's not exactly a dream business to start.
How Harry grew Lowerstreet through cold outreach1st client, Ultimate Leadership Podcast
Why the productising model didn't work out for Lowerstreet
What Harry did in the early days for growth
How losing 30% of revenue was a catalyst for growth
Doubling the agency revenue in 6 months
Quitting his job with no savings to start Lowersteet
Not knowing what to do when starting the company
Addressing shiny object syndrome
Why focus vs portfolio of projects argument is BS
The secret sauce for making a sh*t hot podcast
How to make a show that stands out
Starting a mountain bike community
Recommendations
Book: Out on The Wire by Jessica Abel
Podcast: Startup
Indie Hacker: Andrew Wilkinson
Follow Harry
Twitter
LinkedIn
Follow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
Sponsor - 2 Hour PodcastYes, that's right, I'm sponsoring my own show 🤯After producing hundreds of podcasts for myself and clients, I've been pouring all of my knowledge into my new course, 2 Hour Podcast, which shows you how to start, grow and monetize a podcast that takes you less than 2 hours per week.I know lots of people who want to start a pod and reap the rewards, but struggle to find the time, which is exactly why I made this course.I've taken a three-pronged approach to making a podcast efficiently. The first is a step-by-step video guide to creating your show, covering everything from branding, to editing to hosting. The second part is a 90 minute tutorial where I make a my own podcast completely from scratch, recording the first episode with Arvid Kahl, using the tips from part 1. The final prong is my full Notion system for creating my show, including my episode CRM, guest and outreach templates, plus an episode briefing doc.Head to 2hourpodcast.com to get the full course and get $10 off with the code "bites" at checkout.
10/31/2021 • 16 minutes, 31 seconds
Taking on Google with Fathom Analytics and growing a course to $150k - Jack Ellis, Fathom
Jack Ellis is the co-founder of Fathom Analytics, started with Paul Jarvis in 2019. Jack handles the technical side of the business, but isn't afraid to get on the mic on their podcast, Above Board, or send out some spicy tweets. Jack also runs the Serverless Laravel course, which he launched back in 2020. After this conversation Jack has turned into a true friend, speaking with me for several hours after, a genuinely nice chap. You’re going to want the same thing after listening to this pod. Jack talks with great wisdom on how to approach bootstrapping a SaaS company and taking on a huge incumbent.➡️ Here's my course on starting a podcast in 2 hours or less (use "bites" for $10 off)What we covered in this episode:
What is Fathom Analytics
Joining as a co-founder after the company was founded
How Fathom started
How did they know Fathom was going to work
What growth tactics did Fathom use to grow?
How did they convince people to pay for analytics?
The trade-off of free software
How do you compete in a market with a huge incumbent
Starting a medium competitor, Pico
Benefits of having a co-founder
Quitting a job for Jack's first side-project
Starting a course (Serverless Laravel) that made $150,000
Recommendations
Book: 7 Habits of Highly Effective People
Podcast: Huberman Lab
Indie Hacker: N/A
Follow Jack
Spicy Tweets
Personal Website
Follow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
Sponsor - Part Time Tech JobsThank you to my friend Charlie from Weekend Club for sponsoring this episode, with his new project Part Time Tech Jobs, which is a fantastic site for finding and posting, you guessed it, part time tech jobs If you’re looking to transistion from a full-time role to indie hacking, finding a part time role might be just the thing for you to de-risk that transition. And on the other side, if you’re looking to hire great entrepreneurial talent without breaking the bank, this is where you should post.So if you’re looking for a part time tech job, head to parttimetechjobs.co or if you’re looking for tech talent, use the code INDIEBITES for 80% off all featured posts.
10/28/2021 • 15 minutes, 22 seconds
Building a portfolio of projects to $6k in one month - Pete Codes, No CS Degree
Pete runs No CS Degree, among other things, sharing stories of people who have made it as a developer, without going down the traditional route of getting a computer science degree, showing how it's possible to earn a nice salary without going to university. He has also started High Signal, a community for revenue verified entrepreneurs, a site for finding fully remote companies (sold) and finally made 2 courses where you'll learn how to both monetize and grow your newsletter.➡️ Here's my course on starting a podcast in 2 hours or less.What we covered in this episode
Pete's crazy backstory
How he got into entreprenuership
Most inspiring story from No CS Degree
How does Pete get revenue
Getting a sponsor for a course
How do you grow a newsletter
Launching a monetize your newsletter course
Doing a bundle deal with other indie hackers
Starting the High Signal community
Why some paid communities are bad
Pete's nifty pricing trick
Launching a job board
Recommendations
Book: Mindset by Carol Dweck
Podcast: Indie Hackers
Indie Hacker: Lachlan Kirkwood
Follow Pete
Twitter
Website
Follow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
Thanks to this episode's sponsor, ChurnkeyIt can be a huge challenge to keep churn down when your SaaS product starts to see traction. The founders of Churnkey know exactly how much of a challenge this can be, having collectively grown three SaaS companies to over $4m in ARR.They realized that they were thinking about cancellations all wrong. A relationship with a customer doesn’t stop with the “Cancel” button. So they built Churnkey, which reduces churn by up to 42% with custom cancellation flows. For every customer who clicks “Cancel,” Churnkey offers up dynamic offers that encourage customers to stay subscribed.Just connect Stripe and plug in a small bit of code. In minutes, you’ll be reducing churn by immediately unlocking subscription pauses, dynamic offers, and cancellation insights. See how much revenue Churnkey can recover for you. Visit churnkey.co to start your free trial.
10/20/2021 • 16 minutes, 2 seconds
Growing Upvoty to $17k MRR - Mike Slaats, Upvoty
Mike Slaats is the founder of Upvoty, an instant feedback software which has recently hit $17k MRR. Mike also runs the SaaS pirates community, where he talks all about running a SaaS company. Previously, he scaled Vindy, an only marketplace for home development to 1m ARR in 5 years.What we covered in this episode
Why did you start Upvoty?
Stopping a $1m business to start from scratch
Why your work should be fulfilling
Should you be passionate about your audience?
How to validate your idea
How Mike got his first customers for Upvoty
The value of an MVP and a landing page
Why you should build runway or have an alternative income source
How you can make your own luck
Why indie hackers should build a personal brand
Mike's one bit of advice for founders; validate
How to build an MVP with the BML framework
Recommendations
Book: Intercom on Marketing
Podcast: How I Built This
Indie Hacker: Arvid Kahl
Follow Mike
Twitter
YouTube
SaaS Pirates
Upvoty
Follow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
Thanks to Weekend Club for sponsoring Indie Bites.‘I absolutely love being part of Weekend Club.’‘Huge fan of Weekend Club and I love being part of it.’‘Absolutely love this community.’These are real testimonials for Weekend Club - the internet’s most helpful community for bootstrappers. If you’ve ever struggled meeting other solo founders and staying accountable, then this is for you.We offer weekly Saturday deep working sessions with up to 30 bootstrappers, such as the founders of Simple Poll and VEED, an active Slack community and over 100 software discounts.Go to weekendclub.co and enter a very limited promo code ‘Indie Bites’ for 50% off your first month.
10/13/2021 • 15 minutes, 47 seconds
$250 to $3k MRR in 4 months with a Notion website builder - Noah Bragg, Potion
Noah Bragg is an indie hacker in its truest form. Building in public hacking away on his project, Potion, which is a a way to host your Notion pages as websites behind a custom domain. He's also the co-host of the Product Journey podcast, where he speaks with his co-host Ben about their progress on their respective side projects.What we covered:
The goal of building a huge business
Project: Coffee Pass
When to decide to stop a project
Failing after 2 years working on something
First project as an indie hacker: SupportmanSelling Supportman
Starting Potion$250 to $3,000 MRR in 4 months
How to do a successful product hunt launch
How to get a product hunt maker grant
Focusing on product instead of marketing
Finding the right market / a growing market
Dealing with competition
Recommendations
Book: ReWork
Podcast: My First Million
Indie Hacker: Kenneth Cassel
Follow Noah
Twitter
Potion
Website
Product Journey Podcast
Follow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
Sponsor - UpvotyDo you want to build the best product possible? Then listening to user feedback is one of the best ways to do so. Because by listening to the problems of your users, you can build a real problem-solver that they'll love.Upvoty is a user feedback tool that gives your user's a voice and makes it really easy at the same time for you to prioritize what to build next. By installing Upvoty's feedback boards, you'll have all of your user feedback in one central place and it will really help you connect with your customers and understand their needs. On top of that, you can close the feedback loop by setting up your Changelog and Product Roadmap. Your users will be actively involved in building new features and will love you for that.Try Upvoty 14-days for free and with the code 'INDIEBITES' you'll get a 10% discount on any of their plans.Sign up here.
9/29/2021 • 15 minutes, 6 seconds
Bootstrapping two $3k MRR projects, selling one for $55k - Andy Cloke, Data Fetcher
Andy Cloke is the founder of Data Fetcher, a platform for running API requests in Airtable, which is currently doing around $3k MRR. Andy has started many projects in the past, his most recent one, Influence Grid, was sold for $55k back in mid-2020, having only started it 7 months before. In this episode we talk about his framework for finding trending ideas, building a product and being successful with marketing as a developer. We also talk about the process of selling your product and how to make that go smoothly.What we covered
Andy's background
Kabooshi
Why Andy started Influence Grid
How to leverage Exploding Topics to find trending ideas
Getting validation for your idea
Using cold outreach to grow a platformRocket Reach
Doing SEO from the start
How he grew Influence Grid to $3k MRR
Why decide to sell Influence Grid?
Should you go through a platform for an acquisition?
How to best prepare for a small acquisition
What Andy bought himself after selling for $55k
What he did after the acquisition
The process of finding a new idea
Software Ideas by Kevin Conti
Micro SaaS by Tyler Tringas
Why Andy started Data Fetcher
How Data Fetcher has grown to $3k MRR
Andy's framework for finding a successful idea
How to push through when things aren't going so well
Recommendations
Book: Blue Ocean Strategy
Podcast: Startup to Last
Indie Hacker: Jon Yongfook
Follow Andy
Twitter
Data Fetcher
Follow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
Sponsor - UpvotyDo you want to build the best product possible? Then listening to user feedback is one of the best ways to do so. Because by listening to the problems of your users, you can build a real problem-solver that they'll love.Upvoty is a user feedback tool that gives your user's a voice and makes it really easy at the same time for you to prioritize what to build next. By installing Upvoty's feedback boards, you'll have all of your user feedback in one central place and it will really help you connect with your customers and understand their needs. On top of that, you can close the feedback loop by setting up your Changelog and Product Roadmap. Your users will be actively involved in building new features and will love you for that.Try Upvoty 14-days for free and with the code 'INDIEBITES' you'll get a 10% discount on any of their plans.Sign up here.
9/22/2021 • 16 minutes, 47 seconds
Bootstrapping to over $250k MRR - Baird Hall, Churnkey
Baird is a 4x SaaS founder based in Charleston, SC. His background is in sales, marketing, and support. He bootstrapped and grew two SaaS companies to over $1M in ARR. When he isn't working on Churnkey's sales and marketing, he is on the water with his wife and daughter.What we covered in this episode:
The big challenges faced when bootstrapping
Did Baird always want to bootstrap
Why leave a job to start a company
Did he ever get funding from utalk
How did Waave come about?
How to avoid quitting when times get tough
Getting early customers in for Waave
What was different when they launched Zubtitle (108k MRR)
Why they started a new business completely
Why churn is such a difficult problem to solve
Is it harder or easier to do B2C vs B2B
How to manage context switching
How to make time to run 3 huge businesses at once
Recommendations
Book: Range by David Epstien
Podcast: Indie Hackers
Indie Hacker: Nathan Barry
Follow Baird
Twitter
Churnkey
Follow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
Sponsor - UpvotyDo you want to build the best product possible? Then listening to user feedback is one of the best ways to do so. Because by listening to the problems of your users, you can build a real problem-solver that they'll love.Upvoty is a user feedback tool that gives your user's a voice and makes it really easy at the same time for you to prioritize what to build next. By installing Upvoty's feedback boards, you'll have all of your user feedback in one central place and it will really help you connect with your customers and understand their needs. On top of that, you can close the feedback loop by setting up your Changelog and Product Roadmap. Your users will be actively involved in building new features and will love you for that.Try Upvoty 14-days for free and with the code 'INDIEBITES' you'll get a 10% discount on any of their plans.Sign up here.
9/15/2021 • 16 minutes, 15 seconds
Building Copy.ai in Public - Blake Emal (CMO), Copy.ai
Blake Emal is the CMO at Copy.ai, but it's not been a traditional route into that role. 8 years ago Blake was living in the South of France and when he moved back to the US, he had no idea what he wanted to do. As he spoke French, he landed a gig in the French team of an SEO firm. This was his first foray into marketing and he didn't intend to stay in marketing.Fast forward 7 years of working for agencies, freelancing and in-house, he stumbled across a little tool called Copy.ai. He was quite happy in his current role, but sent the Copy.ai founder a DM on Twitter, asking if he needed any help with marketing. After a few back and forths and a grand total of 3 Zoom calls, Blake became CMO at Copy.ai.In this episode we cover:
What is copy.ai and how does it work?
What does being a CMO in public mean?
Where should founders start with marketing
Why you should just "put a camera in front of you" when building
Why is building in public so effective?
Who is building in public well?
How to get good at Twitter?
Who is doing Twitter well?
Are threads dead?
Why do marketers ruin everything?
Recommendations
Book: Lord of the Flies
Podcast: Creator Lab
Indie Hacker: Bereket
Follow Blake
Twitter
Luma
Follow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
SponsorThank you to Dan Rowden for sponsoring this episode with his product, ilo which helps you easily see which kind of tweets get more impressions, likes, profile clicks and more so you can get grow your Twitter audience. Use the code "INDIEBITES27" for 25% off your plan for life.Sign up here.
9/10/2021 • 15 minutes, 26 seconds
Founder Hot Seat - Overcoming mental health challenges [Bonus]
Listen to the full conversation here on Stefan's podcast.This is about 17 minutes of a recording with my friend Stefan on his Founder Hot Seat podcast, which is a show that explores the real challenges that founders have in their business and how to overcome them.I've had a ton of messages from people after listening to my previous bonus episode where I explained some of the challenges I've had with mental health over the past few months, and this episode was super helpful for me to navigate some of those challenges and set a path forward.From StefanThis episode is a twist on the normal format. James has publicly shared the challenges he's been going through with his mental health.We explore the journey James has been on over the past year, including when things began to change, what that felt like on a day-to-day basis, how James has worked on his recovery and how he plans to move forward.Follow Stefan
Twitter
Talk To Stefan
Follow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
8/5/2021 • 19 minutes, 44 seconds
Bootstrapping Transistor.fm to 13,000+ podcasts - Justin Jackson, Transistor.fm
Justin Jackson is the co-founder of Transistor.fm, a successful bootstrapped podcast hosting company. The journey building Transistor were documented on the Build Your SaaS podcast, which is a must listen. Justin is the founder of the MegaMaker community which he started in 2013, so if you're part of the maker sphere - you'll probably have heard of him.In this episode we cover:
What is Transistor and why did they start it
Why work in podcast hosting? Was it not already a solved problem?
How did they get the first few customers?
What's next for Transistor?
What's it like having "made it" as an indie hacker?
What challenges does Justin run into?
Should you just get a job at a tech company or run your bootstrapped co?
Why bootstrapping is not a level playing field
When you should quit your job
Addressing mental health as an entreprenuer
Recommendations
Book: Life Profitability
Podcast: Software Social
Indie Hacker: Derek Sivers
Follow Justin
Twitter
Blog
Follow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
SponsorThank you to Dan Rowden for sponsoring this episode with his product, ilo which helps you easily see which kind of tweets get more impressions, likes, profile clicks and more so you can get grow your Twitter audience. Use the code "INDIEBITES27" for 25% off your plan for life.Sign up here.
7/25/2021 • 16 minutes, 28 seconds
Making $10k in a weekend selling emoji email addresses - Ben Stokes, Tiny Projects
Ben Stokes a full stack developer and entrepreneur based in Bristol in the UK, who's started an ice cream business and cookie dough business amongst other things. Ben, like many indie hackers, has a bunch of small side project ideas, but not enough time to do them. So he started Tiny Projects. Tiny Projects documents his progress with these small ideas, launching 6 projects since May last year, including One Item Store, which he sold, and his most recent, Mailoji, which has just crossed $10k in revenue.SponsorThank you to today's sponsor, VEED.io, who are hiring developers, designers, product people and more. So if you're looking to join a growing bootstrapper-friendly business, reach out to their CEO, Sabba (s@veed.io), or take a look at their published roles here.Get ad-free and extended conversations of the podcast with Indie Feast membership, for just £4 a month.What we covered in this episode:
Why Ben started an ice cream business
Buying an ice cream machine for £700 after a few pints
Growing a cookie dough business to £13k a month
Why Ben started Tiny Projects
The six projects he's worked on
How to sell a project for $5,000, that only made $2
Selling $10k of emoji domain names
How to go viral on hacker news
Recommendations
Book: Shoe Dog
Podcast: Product Journey
Indie Hacker: Alex West
Follow Ben
Twitter
Tiny Projects
Follow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
6/14/2021 • 16 minutes, 49 seconds
Struggling with my own mental health
I've never really understood mental health, or those who have had these challenges in the past. So when I've had my own challenges, I've struggled to comprehend what has been happening to me. This episode is hopefully an interesting insight into how I've been feeling over the past few months to hopefully help others who might be going through a similar thing.Here's some things I talk about:
Where I've been
Overworking
What went wrong
Why I didn't notice a problem
Why family and friends are so important
The supportive indie hacker community
YouTube videos are hard
Burnout / depression are real shitty
My future plans
How I'm going to get out of this mess
I mentioned in the pod I'd been making videos about my motorbike, here's a few links if you'd like to watch:
Here's the YouTube channel, Monkeying Around
The video I spent 5 hours on
Most recent video
and here's how to contact / support me:
Twitter
Email - james@mckinven.co
Indie Feast Membership
5/15/2021 • 15 minutes, 2 seconds
Growing a podcast to 50k downloads in 6 months - Danny Miranda, The Danny Miranda Show
Today I'm joined by Danny Miranda, who is the host of The Danny Miranda podcast, which has rapidly grown to over 50,000 downloads in less than 6 months. He publishes 3x a week and has had some awesome guests including Harry Dry, Gary Vee and David Perell. Danny is a walking case study of shooting your shot, making your own luck and having laser focus on one single thing.But this episode isn't going to be about podcasting specifically, we're going to talk about how consistency, compounding and execution can lead to you making progress in your personal projects or entrepreneurial ventures. I think you'll be inspired by Danny's story.What we covered:
Who is Danny Miranda?
Why Danny started out dropshipping? and what stopped him from pursuing that?
How did the podcast come about?
Why podcasting isn't that saturated
Why Danny committed to 100 episodes when he started
The unintended benefits of podcasts?
Why laser focus and consistency is the key to Danny's growth
How Danny switched from a starter to a finisher
How to stop context switching
Why accountability is the key to motivation
Short term vs long term thinking
Why the 75 hard program had so much of an impact on Danny
Danny's plan to make money with the pod!
Recommendations
Book: Love Yourself Like Your Life Depends On It
Podcast: Modern Wisdom
Indie Hacker: Steph Smith
Follow Danny
Twitter
Website
Podcast
Follow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
Thanks to this episode's sponsor, ChurnkeyIt can be a huge challenge to keep churn down when your SaaS product starts to see traction. The founders of Churnkey know exactly how much of a challenge this can be, having collectively grown three SaaS companies to over $4m in ARR.They realized that they were thinking about cancellations all wrong. A relationship with a customer doesn’t stop with the “Cancel” button. So they built Churnkey, which reduces churn by up to 42% with custom cancellation flows. For every customer who clicks “Cancel,” Churnkey offers up dynamic offers that encourage customers to stay subscribed.Just connect Stripe and plug in a small bit of code. In minutes, you’ll be reducing churn by immediately unlocking subscription pauses, dynamic offers, and cancellation insights. See how much revenue Churnkey can recover for you. Visit churnkey.co to start your free trial.
4/7/2021 • 15 minutes, 25 seconds
Build in a competitive market, or go niche? - Derrick Reimer, SavvyCal
Derrick Reimer is the founder of SavvyCal, a new approach to calendar scheduling and has grown to multiple thousands MRR since he launched it earlier in 2020. Derrick also co-founded Drip with Rob Walling in 2012, which was acquired by Leadpages in 2016. You might have heard Derrick on the Art of Product podcast with Tuple co-founder Ben Orenstein where they document their journey building their products.Get ad-free and extended conversations of the podcast with Indie Feast membership, for just £4 a month.What we covered in this episode:
What is SavvyCal?
What problem is it trying to solve?
Why go into such a crowded market?
A nice market or crowded one?
The advantage of being a solo founder or small team vs larger competition
How long did Derrick build before launching the MVP?
How much growth has come from pre-existing audience?
What goes into a good Product Hunt launch?
When should Indie Hackers bring marketing support on?
What marketing tactics can you employ?
How does TinySeed funding work?
Should other founders look for this type of funding?
Art of Product podcast
Recommendations
Book: The Mom Test
Podcast: Software Social
Follow Derrick
Twitter
Website
SavvyCal
Follow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
Thanks to this episode's sponsor, ChurnkeyIt can be a huge challenge to keep churn down when your SaaS product starts to see traction. The founders of Churnkey know exactly how much of a challenge this can be, having collectively grown three SaaS companies to over $4m in ARR.They realized that they were thinking about cancellations all wrong. A relationship with a customer doesn’t stop with the “Cancel” button. So they built Churnkey, which reduces churn by up to 42% with custom cancellation flows. For every customer who clicks “Cancel,” Churnkey offers up dynamic offers that encourage customers to stay subscribed.Just connect Stripe and plug in a small bit of code. In minutes, you’ll be reducing churn by immediately unlocking subscription pauses, dynamic offers, and cancellation insights. See how much revenue Churnkey can recover for you. Visit churnkey.co to start your free trial.
3/24/2021 • 15 minutes, 51 seconds
How to build a business you actually enjoy - Natalie Nagele, Wildbit
Natalie Nagele is the co-founder of Wildbit, the company behind Postmark, Beanstalk, People-First Jobs and more. Wildbit has just turned 20 years old, so Natalie knows exactly what it takes to grow and scale successful bootstrapped businesses. What makes Natalie so interesting to me is that she’s in the group of seriously successful indie hackers (over 100k customers, around for 20 years, pretty large team etc.) and they’re still indie very much living by their own rules.What we covered in this episode:
What would you tell yourself 20 years ago before starting Wildbit?
How do you find work that you enjoy and fulfils you?
How much time should you spend on hobbies vs your business?
At what point is a hobby a business and vice versa?
How to get into deep workCal Newport, Deep Work
How many hours you can actually work in a day
How much should you work on your business?
Why you need to take time to step back and think
How much is Natalie working now?
How do you fit work in with the stuff you enjoy?
Work life balance
Recommendations
Book: Anti-fragile
Podcast: 99% Invisible
Indie Hacker: Chris Savage + Brendan Schwartz
Follow Natalie
Twitter
Wildbit
Follow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
Thanks to this episode's sponsor, ChurnkeyIt can be a huge challenge to keep churn down when your SaaS product starts to see traction. The founders of Churnkey know exactly how much of a challenge this can be, having collectively grown three SaaS companies to over $4m in ARR.They realized that they were thinking about cancellations all wrong. A relationship with a customer doesn’t stop with the “Cancel” button. So they built Churnkey, which reduces churn by up to 42% with custom cancellation flows. For every customer who clicks “Cancel,” Churnkey offers up dynamic offers that encourage customers to stay subscribed.Just connect Stripe and plug in a small bit of code. In minutes, you’ll be reducing churn by immediately unlocking subscription pauses, dynamic offers, and cancellation insights. See how much revenue Churnkey can recover for you. Visit churnkey.co to start your free trial.
3/20/2021 • 15 minutes, 37 seconds
$600 MRR and 150 new users per day with SEO and marketing - Elston Baretto, Tiiny Host
Elston Baretto is the founder of Tiiny.host and is in a similar position to most indie hackers - working on his side-project alongside a full time job, but has had a career packed with learnings that we're going to talk through in this episode. Elston started out his career at JP Morgan, having reluctantly accepted a graduate job he planned to stay at for 6 months. 4 years later, he was still at the conglomerate bank, but he wasn't satisfied staying there for the rest of his career.While at JP Morgan, Elston launched a few side-projects, some of which still make revenue today, but decided to leave to chase the startup dream. Fast forward a year and the startup dream was over, a company with 14 employees but little traction - sound familiar?Elston went back to work full-time while he figured things out. In January 2020, he launched Tiiny.host, a super simple way to host your projects. After launching, he made $1,000 in just 3 days using lifetime deals and is now chugging away nicely as a side project.What we covered in this episode:
What is Tiiny Host and why did Elston start it
How he made lifetime deals work for his launch
Why Elston has put marketing first for Tiiny Host
Setting goals for your indie hacker business
How Tiiny Host got 150 sites a day being created from free SEO pages
How has he made marketing fun
Doing side-project marketing
Elston's plans to go full-time
Recommendations
Book: Traction
Podcast: Tim Ferris Show
Indie Hacker: Sabba Kenyejad
Follow Elston
Twitter
Tiiny Host
Follow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
Thanks to Weekend Club for sponsoring Indie Bites.‘I absolutely love being part of Weekend Club.’‘Huge fan of Weekend Club and I love being part of it.’‘Absolutely love this community.’These are real testimonials for Weekend Club - the internet’s most helpful community for bootstrappers. If you’ve ever struggled meeting other solo founders and staying accountable, then this is for you.We offer weekly Saturday deep working sessions with up to 30 bootstrappers, such as the founders of Simple Poll and VEED, an active Slack community and over 100 software discounts.Go to weekendclub.co and enter a very limited promo code ‘Indie Bites’ for 50% off your first month.
3/17/2021 • 15 minutes, 34 seconds
Building a mid 6-figure Notion course in under a year, solo - Marie Poulin, Notion Mastery
Marie Poulin is the host of Notion Office Hours, creator of Notion Mastery, Run Your Learning Launch, Digital Strategy School, Think Like a Digital Strategist, and co-founded Oki Doki with her husband, where they help folks create, launch, and market online courses and training programs.What we covered in this episode:
What is Notion Mastery and why did Marie start it?
The impact YouTube had on growth
How the course earned $10k in the first week
Why Marie doubled down on the course as her main project
Why it's important not to be a perfectionist
Why niching is important
How 80% of Marie's course revenue came from YouTube
How to make the most out of Notion
How to enjoy the work you do
Making $10k extra a month with Gumroad templates
Recommendations
Book: Do More Great Work
Podcast: This Is Uncomfortable
Indie Hacker: Anne-Laure Le Cunff
Follow Marie
Twitter
Notion Mastery
Marie's YouTube
Follow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
Thank you to this episode's sponsor, ilo.so!You probably know that Twitter is an incredibly useful tool for us as indie hackers, but sometimes Twitter's in-built analytics tool doesn't quite give you the metrics that really matter. Dan Rowden, from Indie Bites episode 17, has created the most useful analytics tool for Twitter, giving you the metrics that actually help you understand your tweet performance and grow your audience.With one glance, ilo helps you easily see which kind of tweets get more impressions, likes, profile clicks and more so you can get grow your Twitter audience.Head to ilo.so and use the code INDIEBITES20 to get 25% off your ilo subscription for life. There are only 10 codes available so check it out before they all go!
3/4/2021 • 15 minutes, 28 seconds
Lessons learned bootstrapping and selling a $55k p/m SaaS - Arvid Kahl, TheBootstrappedFounder
Arvid Kahl is a software engineer turned entrepreneur. He co-founded and FeedbackPanda, an online teacher productivity SaaS company, with his partner Danielle Simpson. They sold the business for a life-changing amount of money in 2019, two years after founding the business. Arvid writes on TheBootstrappedFounder.com because bootstrapping is a desirable, value- and wealth-generating way of running a company. In over a decade of working in startup businesses of all sizes, Arvid has learned a thing or two about what works, what doesn't, and how to increase the chances of building a successful business.Get the full, 60 minute conversation with Arvid here with the Indie Feast membership.What we covered in this episode:
The Feedback Panda story
Was the ambition to sell the company from the start?Built to Sell, John Warrillow
What Indie Hackers can learn from Zero to Sold
What happens once you sell a business?
Why settle on the format of a book?
Why didn't Arvid make his book free?
How to find a critical problem in a market that's willing to pay
Tips for going into a crowded market
How to to find your audience
Recommendations
Book: The Mom Test
Podcast: Indie Hackers
Indie Hacker: Sergio Mattei
Follow Arvid
Twitter
The Embedded Entrepreneur
Zero to Sold
Follow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
Today we have Embarque.io supporting the show! Embarque is run by a fellow indie hacker and has just crossed 6 figures in revenue. Embarque is an agency that offers productised SEO content that converts.It blew my mind when Julian told me about the growth their client MentorCruise had from the SEO content, resulting in 107% increase in MRR, 100% increase in monthly trials and a 114% increase SEO traffic. My word, wouldn't you want those kind of results for your indie business.Go and check out what Embarque are offering at Embarque.io and get $100 off your first package with the code 'INDIEBITES'.
2/23/2021 • 15 minutes, 45 seconds
Making $15k in 24 hours selling a book on Gumroad - Philip Kiely, Gumroad
Today we're joined by Philip Kiely, who is currently Head of Marketing at Gumroad. Philip also launched "Writing for Software Developers" last May, making $20,000 in sales in its first week without any pre-existing audience. Since then, Philip has been on a mission to help as many software developers as possible realize that they possess the skills they need to become great writers. What we covered in this episode:
Why Philip wrote 'Writing for Software Developers'
How Philip made $20k in 24 hours with no pre-existing audience
Should you do pre-sales if you're selling an info product?
How Philip got his job at Gumroad
Why there has been a boom in the creator economy
Why choose Gumroad as your selling platform
Where a new creator should start when selling a product
Who made the most money on Gumroad in 2020
Gumroad Stats 2020
Follow Philip
Twitter
Website
Follow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
Thanks to Weekend Club for sponsoring Indie Bites, which is launching in the US this week!‘I absolutely love being part of Weekend Club.’‘Huge fan of Weekend Club and I love being part of it.’‘Absolutely love this community.’These are real testimonials for Weekend Club - the internet’s most helpful community for bootstrappers. If you’ve ever struggled meeting other solo founders and staying accountable, then this is for you.We offer weekly Saturday deep working sessions with up to 30 bootstrappers, such as the founders of Simple Poll and VEED, an active Slack community and over 100 software discounts.Go to weekendclub.co and enter a very limited promo code ‘Indie Bites’ for 50% off your first month.Interested in ad-free episodes an exclusive content? Sign up to the Indie Feast membership.
1/23/2021 • 15 minutes, 30 seconds
Making over $5k/month from a portfolio of side projects - Dan Rowden, ilo
Dan, like many other indie hackers, runs a bunch of projects alongside a full-time job which all compound to him making over $5k a month. In 2012 he started Magpile, a free online resource about magazines, which was followed by Subsail, a platform to help indie publishers sell magazine subscriptions.Earlier this year Dan started using the publishing platform Ghost, which he then started to build a suite of products around, now including:
Gloat; a productised service for hosting and self hosting
Cove; a commenting tool for Ghost blogs
Substation; a theme for Ghost
Dan also launched ilo, a better analytics platform for Twitter a few months ago, which has earned over $6k in revenue since launch.What we covered in this episode:
Why Dan lives in Mauritius
Why choose multiple projects over doing just one?
How do you manage your time with 3 kids, a wife and a full-time job?
Why Dan isn't too worried about 'growing' his side projects
The pros and cons of working on your side project with a full-time job
Not worrying about the money your side project earns - does it take the fun out of it?
Why is Dan so bullish on Ghost?
Why having a 'suite' of products is complimentary to each other
Getting a 75k acquisition offer
Awesome thread on the $75k offer
What were the options?
Being prepared to sell your projects
Building an alternative to Twitter analytics
Recommendations
Magazine: Courier
Newsletter: Dense Discovery
Podcast: Startup
Indie Hacker: Justin Jackson
Follow Dan
Twitter
Website
Follow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
Thanks to Weekend Club for sponsoring Indie Bites, which is launching in the US this week!‘I absolutely love being part of Weekend Club.’‘Huge fan of Weekend Club and I love being part of it.’‘Absolutely love this community.’These are real testimonials for Weekend Club - the internet’s most helpful community for bootstrappers. If you’ve ever struggled meeting other solo founders and staying accountable, then this is for you.We offer weekly Saturday deep working sessions with up to 30 bootstrappers, such as the founders of Simple Poll and VEED, an active Slack community and over 100 software discounts.Go to weekendclub.co and enter a very limited promo code ‘Indie Bites’ for 50% off your first month.Interested in ad-free episodes an exclusive content? Sign up to the Indie Feast membership.
1/15/2021 • 15 minutes, 36 seconds
Turning $100 into $52,000 selling handmade candles DTC - Dianna Allen, TERRA
Dianna Allen is the founder of TERRA, a DTC candle brand, where she designs and hand pours a variety of candles. In October 2020, Dianna left her life as a freelancer behind to put her efforts into TERRA full-time, which as we all know, is a huge leap to make.What we covered:
Should more indie hackers work on physical products?
What happened with Budget Meal Planner?
Should more indie hackers kill projects more often?
Does turning a passion into a business take the enjoyment away?
What was the breakthrough moment with Terra
Making the leap going full-time with your business
Why Dianna went straight into
How do the economics of a physical product business work?
How Terra was started with just $100
Using Instagram for 99% of growth
The hardest part of running a physical product business
How to balance one-term purchases vs MRR
Why we should support more small businesses?
Links
Dianna's IH podcast episode
Dianna's article on growing TERRA to 50k
Recommendations
Book: Shoe Dog
Indie Hacker: AJ from Carrd
Podcast: Doesn't listen
Follow Dianna
Twitter
Instagram
Terra
Follow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
Thanks to Weekend Club for sponsoring Indie Bites, which is launching in the US this week!‘I absolutely love being part of Weekend Club.’‘Huge fan of Weekend Club and I love being part of it.’‘Absolutely love this community.’These are real testimonials for Weekend Club - the internet’s most helpful community for bootstrappers. If you’ve ever struggled meeting other solo founders and staying accountable, then this is for you.We offer weekly Saturday deep working sessions with up to 30 bootstrappers, such as the founders of Simple Poll and VEED, an active Slack community and over 100 software discounts.Go to weekendclub.co and enter a very limited promo code ‘Indie Bites’ for 50% off your first month.
1/11/2021 • 15 minutes, 25 seconds
How Pat Walls made $20k in 2 weeks from his SEO course - Pat Walls, Starter Story
Pat Walls is the founder of Starter Story, a website dedicated to helping people start businesses. They interview entrepreneurs from around the world about how they started their business and how they grew it, including revenue figures for every business they interview.But in this episode, we’re going to be discussing the new SEO course that Pat launched this week, making over $20k in pre-sales.What we covered
20k in 2 weeks, how did you do it?
How and why Pat started Starter Story?
How he grew it to 500,000 monthly visitors
Why Reddit can be a goldmine, but why Pat stopped using it
How Starter Story allowed Pat to go full-time
The most insane story out of 2,000 posts
Brumate
D*ck at Your Door
Using Twitter to validate an idea
Executing on that idea
How to price a course
The benefit of building in public
How to execute so quickly
How to build an audience
Recommendations
Book: Deep Work by Cal Newport
Podcast: Indie Hackers
Indie Hacker: Harry Dry
Follow Pat
Twitter
Starter Story
Pat's Building Thread
Lean SEO Course
Follow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
Thanks to Weekend Club for sponsoring Indie Bites.‘I absolutely love being part of Weekend Club.’‘Huge fan of Weekend Club and I love being part of it.’‘Absolutely love this community.’These are real testimonials for Weekend Club - the internet’s most helpful community for bootstrappers. If you’ve ever struggled meeting other solo founders and staying accountable, then this is for you.We offer weekly Saturday deep working sessions with up to 30 bootstrappers, such as the founders of Simple Poll and VEED, an active Slack community and over 100 software discounts.Go to weekendclub.co and enter a very limited promo code ‘Indie Bites’ for 50% off your first month.
12/16/2020 • 15 minutes, 32 seconds
Choosing freedom over money - Rob Hope, One Page Love + Yo!
Today I’m joined by Rob Hope, who is a South African designer, developer and the host of one of my favorite podcasts out there for entrepreneurs Yo!. He's also the founder of One Page Love, Email Love, and has recently released an ebook with a hundred landing page tips. It's safe to say Rob knows his stuff. When it comes to building landing pages, having started One Page Love back in 2008.What we discussed in this episode:
Have we lost the joy of simplicity?
How to cut through the noise
What makes a good landing page
Rob's mammoth landing page Twitter thread
How to write a good Twitter thread
Have lots of projects at the same time
Do you have to make money off a side project
How do you achieve freedom
Recommendations
Landing Page: Muzzle
Book: Anything You Want by Derek Sivers
Podcast: Indie Hackers
Indie Hacker: AJ (from Carrd)
Follow Rob
Twitter
Landing Page Thread
One Page Love
Website
Yo!
Follow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
Thanks to Weekend Club for sponsoring Indie Bites.‘I absolutely love being part of Weekend Club.’‘Huge fan of Weekend Club and I love being part of it.’‘Absolutely love this community.’These are real testimonials for Weekend Club - the internet’s most helpful community for bootstrappers. If you’ve ever struggled meeting other solo founders and staying accountable, then this is for you.We offer weekly Saturday deep working sessions with up to 30 bootstrappers, such as the founders of Simple Poll and VEED, an active Slack community and over 100 software discounts.Go to weekendclub.co and enter a very limited promo code ‘Indie Bites’ for 50% off your first month.
12/8/2020 • 15 minutes, 39 seconds
Why indie hackers should be podcasting - Mark Asquith, Rebel Base Media
Mark Asquith (aka That British Podcast Guy) is the CEO of Rebel Base Media, the U.K. podcast tech company that makes Captivate.fm and so much more. What we discussed in this episode:
What makes podcasting such a good medium
Is the amount of investment in podcasting (from the likes of Spotify) a good thing?
Is podcasting oversaturated?
What does it take to grow a podcast?
How to stay consistent with producing your show
How Mark started out with his businesses
Bootstrapping the next venture
Recommendations
Book: E-Myth Revisited
Podcast: The Jordan Harbinger Show
Indie Hacker: Corey Haines
Follow Mark
Twitter
Rebel Base Media
Follow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Thanks to Weekend Club for sponsoring Indie Bites.‘I absolutely love being part of Weekend Club.’‘Huge fan of Weekend Club and I love being part of it.’‘Absolutely love this community.’These are real testimonials for Weekend Club - the internet’s most helpful community for bootstrappers. If you’ve ever struggled meeting other solo founders and staying accountable, then this is for you.We offer weekly Saturday deep working sessions with up to 30 bootstrappers, such as the founders of Simple Poll and VEED, an active Slack community and over 100 software discounts.Go to weekendclub.co and enter promo code ‘Indie Bites’ for a 30 day free trial.
12/1/2020 • 15 minutes, 28 seconds
Making a full-time income working just one day per week - Ramy Khuffash, Page Flows
Ramy Khuffash is the founder of Page Flows, a library of inspiration videos for product designers. Ramy started Page Flows after building a UI newsletter to thousands of subscribers, trying to improve his own skills as a developer who cares about design. Ramy is now a full-time indie hacker, with Page Flows making enough revenue to sustain him, alongside a few other side projects.What we discussed in this episode:
Is the full-time indie hacker dream all it's made out to be
Why Ramy tried six startups in six months, was it a success?
Do founders work on things for too long?
Ramy's journey working for a VC backed startup
How it compares to bootstrapping
What is Page Flows?
How does it earn money?
The trend of content / directory businesses
Has he wasted his spare time?
Why Ramy stopped sharing revenue numbers
Recommendations
Book: Hatching Twitter
Podcast: Indie Hackers
Indie Hacker: Pieter Levels
Follow Ramy
Twitter
Page Flows
Follow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Thanks to Weekend Club for sponsoring Indie Bites.‘I absolutely love being part of Weekend Club.’‘Huge fan of Weekend Club and I love being part of it.’‘Absolutely love this community.’These are real testimonials for Weekend Club - the internet’s most helpful community for bootstrappers. If you’ve ever struggled meeting other solo founders and staying accountable, then this is for you.We offer weekly Saturday deep working sessions with up to 30 bootstrappers, such as the founders of Simple Poll and VEED, an active Slack community and over 100 software discounts.Go to weekendclub.co and enter a very limited promo code ‘Indie Bites’ for 50% off your first month.
11/18/2020 • 15 minutes, 23 seconds
Paying off $250k in debt by starting a company making $1.5m ARR - Nick Fogle, Wavve
Nick Fogle is the co-founder of Wavve and ChurnKey, but there is a lot more to Nick than just that. Wavve is an audio to video platform which has now hit $1.5m in ARR, but Nick has only left his full time job 3 years after starting the company and 9 months after it had eclipsed his salary. Why? Well, Nick had $250,000 student loans to pay off.What we covered in this episode:
How Nick got into $250,000 of debt
How he felt in Christmas 2016 when he was looking at the massive number
What steps he took to get out of debt (he wrote a book about this)
What advice he'd give to others in the same position
Why he started Wavve, a video to audio platform
How the business grew to $1.5m ARR
What it takes to work full time and run a business
Why staying lean is so important for him
Recommendations
Book: Anti Fragile by Nassim Nicholas Taleb
Podcast: Reply All
Indie Hacker: Scott Hurff
10/31/2020 • 15 minutes, 46 seconds
Building the one of the most popular Slack apps of all time - Wilhelm Klopp, Simple Poll
Wilhelm Klopp is the founder of Simple Poll, a super simple (but powerful) poll Slack app that has over 600k active users. Wil now works on Simple Poll full time having left his job at GitHub in September 2019 (1 year ago 🎉).What we discussed in this episode:
Hows the year been after leaving GitHub
What is Simple Poll
How Wil came up with the idea
How he grew the app to 600k users
What he did to start charging for a free app
The danger of building for another platform (Slack)
How he transitioned to work full-time on Simple Poll
What it's like being a full-time indie hacker
Why it's quite good having a job while working on side projects
Quick fire answers
Podcast: Art of Product
Book: The Great CEO Within
Indie Hacker: Natalie Nagele
Follow Wil
Twitter
Simple Poll
Follow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Thanks to Mugshot Bot for sponsoring Indie Bites.Mugshot Bot automatically generates unique, beautifully designed images for every page on your website or blog so you don’t have to worry about them. This means you can focus on what matters: building your product and creating great content.Mugshot Bot is a tool that I use personally and made by another indie hacker, Joe Masilotti. To level up your link previews, go to mugshotbot.com/indiebites, link in the show notes, to create an image for your site, completely free.
10/24/2020 • 15 minutes, 29 seconds
Building a SaaS with just one hour every day - Mubashar Iqbal (Mubs)
Mubashar 'Mubs' Iqbal is a prolific maker who has started over 90 projects. Currently Mubs is building Founderpath with Nathan Latka, and on One Hour SaaS where he spends one hour every day working on SaaS businesses.In this episode we talked about:
How Mubs got into starting side-projects
How he comes up with ideas and decides what to work on
Why some of his projects run on auto-pilot
How much it costs to run those that are on auto-pilot
How to sell side-projects
How to build side-projects quickly
What Mubs most successful project has been
How did Founderpath come about
Why Mubs started One Hour SaaS
Recommendations
Book: Built to Sell
Podcast: Indie Hackers
Indie Hacker: Ben Tossell
Follow Mubs
Twitter
One Hour SaaS
Mubs' projects portfolio
Founderpath
Follow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Thanks to Mugshot Bot for sponsoring Indie Bites.Mugshot Bot automatically generates unique, beautifully designed images for every page on your website or blog so you don’t have to worry about them. This means you can focus on what matters: building your product and creating great content.Mugshot Bot is a tool that I use personally and made by another indie hacker, Joe Masilotti. To level up your link previews, go to mugshotbot.com/indiebites, link in the show notes, to create an image for your site, completely free.
10/19/2020 • 15 minutes, 10 seconds
What it takes to build a community - Rosie Sherry, Indie Hackers
Rosie Sherry is a community builder, indie hacker and founder. She currently runs the Indie Hackers community and also a weekly newsletter where she talks about building communities. Previously, Rosie founded Ministry of Testing.In this episode we talked about:
Rosie's background as an indie hacker
Going full time on Ministry of Testing, growing that into a £1m+ business
What it's like running the Indie Hackers community
What makes a good Indie Hackers post
How to make the most out of the platform
Why Rosie started Rosieland, her paid newsletter
What goes into building a community
How we can be a more inclusive community
Recommendations
Book: Anything from Derek Sivers
Podcast: Indie Hackers
Indie Hacker: Monica Lent
Follow Rosie
Twitter
Rosieland
Follow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Thanks to Weekend Club for sponsoring Indie Bites.‘I absolutely love being part of Weekend Club.’‘Huge fan of Weekend Club and I love being part of it.’‘Absolutely love this community.’These are real testimonials for Weekend Club - the internet’s most helpful community for bootstrappers. If you’ve ever struggled meeting other solo founders and staying accountable, then this is for you.We offer weekly Saturday deep working sessions with up to 30 bootstrappers, such as the founders of Simple Poll and VEED, an active Slack community and over 100 software discounts.Go to weekendclub.co and enter a very limited promo code ‘Indie Bites’ for 50% off your first month.
10/15/2020 • 15 minutes, 22 seconds
Leaving a full-time head of growth role to be a full-time indie hacker - Corey Haines, Swipe Files and more
Corey Haines is the founder of Swipe Files, he also runs refactoring growth, mental models for marketing, hey marketers and he was previously the head of growth at Baremetrics. I've been a follower of Corey for a while and impressed by the level and consistency of everything he produces.In this episode we talked about:
What projects Corey is currently working on
Why he left Baremetrics
What it's like leaving a stable, full-time job to be an indie hacker
How he manages his time between projects
How much revenue he makes
How to build things quickly
Deciding on what ideas to focus on
Advice for indie hackers wanting to live the dream
Recommendations
Book: Atomic Habits
Podcast: Akimbo
Indie Hacker: David Perrell
Follow Corey
Twitter
Swipe Files
Mental Models for Marketing
Refactoring Growth
Hey Marketers
Follow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Thanks to Weekend Club for sponsoring Indie Bites.‘I absolutely love being part of Weekend Club.’‘Huge fan of Weekend Club and I love being part of it.’‘Absolutely love this community.’These are real testimonials for Weekend Club - the internet’s most helpful community for bootstrappers. If you’ve ever struggled meeting other solo founders and staying accountable, then this is for you.We offer weekly Saturday deep working sessions with up to 30 bootstrappers, such as the founders of Simple Poll and VEED, an active Slack community and over 100 software discounts.Go to weekendclub.co and enter a very limited promo code ‘Indie Bites’ for 50% off your first month.Full TranscriptJames: You've got a lot going on. Tell me a little bit more about your various side projects, where your main focus is right now.Corey: Yeah. So I don't know, maybe I just caught the entrepreneurial bug or have an itch to create stuff. But, about two years ago I started just making stuff on the side. I started with a newsletter actually that ended up shutting down later, but it was called the TLDR on SaaS marketing. And that was like my first entry point into creating something and sharing it online and it's actually the reason why I created my Twitter account in the first place. and then, yeah, it's just been through a little bit of. serendipity and connection between projects.um, you know, I was talking with a Baremetrics customer, actually. And he's like, Hey, where do I find someone like you? where would you post a job if you were hiring yourself? And I was like, actually, I don't know. There isn't really like a job board for marketers. So I went out and built it. Later on I was talking about different mental models and frameworks that I've found really helpful for my work at Baremetrics.Other people were asking for the Notion doc and you know where to learn more about it. So I figured out why don't I just package this up into a course, same thing with B2B SaaS marketing, with what we've done at Baremetrics is figuring out how to create this new course too. Now Swipe Files, I would swipe something and I would write some notes, some bullet points about here's, what I think is great about it and then I noticed this is actually pretty useful because there's a few sites out there, like swipefile.com and Swipe Worthy, or I think it's swiped.co, which are fantastic sources of inspiration, but you still have to do the work to figure out what you want to glean from it.So Swipe Files is my attempt to build a library of content where I will tell you and show you what it is you can take away from it instead of having to deduce it for yourself. And now I've got a bunch of other things I'll do in the future, but, yesterday went full time as a creator on my own stuff.James: Yeah. Tell me a little bit more about that. So previously you head of growth at Baremetrics. How long were you there for and, what went into making decision that now is the right time to leave?Corey: I was there for almost two years and had a fantastic time, experimented with a ton. We grew about 30% which was great for a bootstrapped company. I really changed a lot and I was all over the place with, trying to find different channels and breakthroughs, and really what we came to was that company wasn't at the right spot to really support a growth role with the budget and the engineering time that was needed to really push the ball forward and so just decided to part ways. And I was already the place that I wanted to go full time and my own stuff anyways I think coincidentally, a little bit serendipitously was perfectly the timing for me to start working on my own stuff full time and, head on to this new chapter of my life.James: So with your various side projects, or they're not side projects now that you're full time projects, How do they each look in terms of revenue what's making the most for you? Corey: Yeah right now the breadwinner are the courses, refactoring growth and mental models for marketing and I've done about 36,000 in the last 10 months. I couldn't do what I'm doing today without that revenue on the side, to be able to, fund myself into going full time as a creator. The other one, now that I'm trying to build into becoming the breadwinner is Swipe Files. And to date I actually, I couldn't tell you the revenue that has done, I think it's probably done a couple thousand in revenue because it's split between monthly annual in lifetimes.It's a little bit more difficult for me to... I didn't go through Stripe and do the math beforehand. but, um, it does about like the MRR today is about a thousand dollars. and then, Hey Marketers, to be honest, I've started to neglected for the last year. I launched it and then I spent a good four or five months working really hard on it. And then figured I would outsource it to my nephew, who is a poor college student and, and needs some cheap, manual labor.It still does $100 to $300 a month, maybe. And it's a pay what you want model too. So sometimes I'll get a job posting for one dollar and sometimes I'll get a job posting for a hundred bucks. But it depends. James: so you've got all of these projects so much going on now. How do you squeeze it all in? And how did you manage your time before? I guess this week?Corey: The answer is I didn't, and I'm going to figure it out now. When I was with Baremetrics full time, I was very much working in these sprints. With Hey Marketers; I created the job for within three weekends and then I would just work here and there nights and weekends, especially, it wasn't very much work, to be honest. With the courses I created Mental Models for Marketing within the span of a month, about a week of that was spent on vacation with a Thanksgiving break. Same thing with Refactoring Growth; it took me about 45 days to create that course. About two weeks of that was spent on vacation, just heads down, creating a lot of the content. With Swipe Files now that's really been kinda my nights and weekends project, where Monday nights is like my night or I'll sit down and I'll write the tear down schedule the email, schedule the tweet thread. Now, what I'm wanting to do is, really go all in on Swipe Files, and trying to get into a cadence.I heard some advice from, from my friend, Michael Taylor, but I'd also been thinking this beforehand, but getting into a cadence where Mondays are going to be my podcasting day. Tuesday are going to be my tear down's day. Wednesday is going to be my meetings day, maybe with friends and or consulting or whatever. Thursday is going to be my, articles and guides day.And then Friday, it's going to be my newsletter, something like that, Where I kind of time blocks specific parts of that I can really get into deep work and focus. James: How do you decide which ideas to pursue, and then how do you stay focused on it and not get distracted by new ideas or, or pursuing something until it gets to a point where it's growing nicely?Corey: Yeah, I probably skew towards spending too much time on something. So that's something I'm trying to work against. Like for example, when I was doing the newsletter, my very first project, I did it a full year and only got 200 subscribers and just didn't feel like it was going anywhere, I think that what's helped with the courses and it Swipe Files is that they're very much, you get the content work done once and then you can just market it afterwards.And so that's really helped me and my own weaknesses and my own personality. Just being able to jump between projects. I was like, alright, great, I've created one course now let's create another course. Now let's create a membership site. Like they all just, allowed me to be all over the place.But what's helped me cause I have a bazillion other ideas that I could pursue. And all of these came from that same kind of idea bucket. And what I found helps is just writing every single thing down. I used to use Evernote, then I used Notion now use Roam and I've ported everything over there and had been using that for several months now.But literally every single thought that enters my brain gets put somewhere, especially business ideas and I'll flush it out. All right. Type up all the things that I have that way I can just get it out of my mind, not thinking about it again. And usually what I like to do is if I think about it again over and over again, and it keeps coming up and I keep revisiting and I keep writing more ideas, then I know that there's something here . James: Yeah, I think what you're able to do as well is build things quite quickly. Corey: Yeah, I think speed is vastly underrated and underappreciated for aspiring entrepreneurs, indie hackers, anyone who's building something.The point is to create something quickly and fast and to get it out and get it in front of people. Each of the courses I did under 45 days, Swipe Files took me about 60 days, about two months to get from first breaking ground in Webflow to launching and feeling done with it. And that's really allowed me to 1/ be able to do it and finish it cause the longer something goes on, the less likely you are to finish it. but 2/ be able to grow and see significant progress.James: yeah. What, what what's been your biggest struggle with building your various projects?Corey: Time, I think just lack of time. Not wanting any of the time to bleed into time at Baremetrics, I'm working full time at a job where I have an obligation. And so that was, so many nights and weekends where I was just like half falling asleep, writing, creating something, trying to plan something. And so that's been the biggest struggle for me has just been; feeling a little bit like, kinda caged up, like I'm wanting to get out. I working in a straight jacket. Like I can't do all the things that I want to do because I don't have the physical time.James: And I'd ask you what your advice is. For indie hackers who are sort of in the position you're in before working a full time job, got various different projects on the go and they want the dream of leaving their job and working full time on their projects.What advice would you give to them?Corey: I would say just make a lot of stuff and get it out of your system, and test things out because there's no safer time to do that when you have a paycheck. I think the mistake that. This isn't a knock on them, but I was just listening to the Dru Riley podcast with Courtland and on the indie hackers podcast.And, he was talking about how he had an amazing job saved up 250 grand and then quit. And then basically has just been burning through savings for the last three years because he was comfortable. and I was like"that's amazing, that's great, I'm glad he found something that worked for him "but you don't have to do it that way. If he hadn't been experimenting while he was still at his job. And then he found something, that worked or that was viable, or that was promising and then left his job, he would have had the savings to work on that thing full time, instead of doing the opposite of, let me burn through my savings to find something that works and then race against the clock to replace that income.So I would say experiment, get yourself in a good financial position. The more savings, the better, but also the more traction initially, the better as well. You need the cushion traction. So try to find as much of both of those as you can while you're still working full time.James: Corey, I wanted to talk just quickly, very quickly about Twitter because you're super active on Twitter. What's your strategy or goal with Twitter?Corey: I didn't have a Twitter strategy I think up until I started with Swipe Files, to be honest. Because, one, it was just me sharing, interesting, relevant things, working at Baremetrics, sharing about marketing, commenting with people . I shared basically nothing about my personal life on Twitter. It's all business, marketing, SaaS, entrepreneurship. So that gives people a reason to follow me. yeah, I think the main three things are. Being an interesting person with interesting things to say, making a lot of friends who can amplify you and then having a consistent schedule of, I mean, I think threads are a fantastic way of delivering content.they're more interesting. People are more likely to retweet it just cause it's more valuable than a single tweet. and I keep it very focused on again, SaaS, marketing, entrepreneurship, and business in general.James: Yeah, without a doubt, that's a really cool way to do it. we'll sort of round off with a final question about. the tools you use, because we haven't really discussed that at all,what are the marketing tools and growth tools would you recommend for indie hackers?Corey: Yeah. So I build most of my sites in Webflow. I have one site, on Carrd, I'm a huge fan of Webflow and I love the flexibility. I still don't really don't know how to use Carrd that much, to be honest. So I might eventually move off of it. It's just crazy cheap and it's amazing deal and AJ is a great creator so I like supporting him. I use right message for all my kind of email capture and that connects with Convert Kit, which is what I use for all email marketing newsletter related things. I use Member Stack on top of Webflow to create the membership site for Swipe Files.I've also been using Sparkloop for my newsletter, a referral program, which needs some tweaking and some massaging, but has also worked really, I've gotten a couple of big wins from it, which has already justified the cost for where, the vast majority of people do not refer anyone, but a couple people do and they bring in 50 subscribers each and I'm like, all right.Wow. This is, you know, glad we had that in place James: All right then final, quick fire questions. What's your favorite book, Corey?Corey: Oh man. I'm looking at my book sack back here. You know, I don't know if I have a favorite book. how about this? I'll give you my favorite books from the last three years. So I've like a favorite book of the year. 2018 for me was Atomic Habits. 2019 for me was Ultra Learning. 2020 for me has been a book called the Ruthless Elimination of Hurry by a guy named John Mark Homer and, it's just about essentially the way you're supposed to live life as a Christian, you know, religious, but I think there's a lot of really practical implications for kind of this culture of Busy-ness in America that we've gotten ourselves into and try to reverse that a bit.James: and you say you're a podcast binger, what's your favorite? Corey: Akimbo - Seth Godin. James: Which indie hacker do you admire slash who should people Follow?Corey: Oh man. You know what? David Perrel is... dude, the guy's just, I don't think people even understand what he's done, with his Twitter following where he's come from his podcasts, his course. the guy is just a machine he's super smart, but also his success already is amazing, you just look at the success of them and you can, you can't ignore, the guy does a million plus course sales a year.He has the podcast, he does the angel investing. Many other things we probably don't even know about yet that he has his hands in, and it's just, sky's the limit for that guy.James: Very impressive. And then finally, what are you most excited for the future? Both personally and business or both?Corey: I'm really stoked to start working on a SaaS business, to be honest. It's a long journey. It's a long road, but that's my end goal. James: Absolutely Corey, you've been an immense guest we've recorded for 50 minutes and it's going to go all into a 15 minute podcast. Corey: Cool. Amazing, man. Yeah. Thanks for having me.Thank you so much for listening to this episode of Indy bites. I hope you feel inspired by listening to this conversation between me and Corey. if you did enjoy this episode, I'd love you to share the episode with just one in the hacker that will find it useful. It does help the podcast grow. As always you'll find links for everything discussed in the episode, in the show notes. That's all from me enjoy the rest of your day
10/7/2020 • 15 minutes, 26 seconds
How VEED grew to $1.7m ARR in less than 2 years - Sabba Keynejad, Veed.io
Sabba Keynejad is the co-founder and CEO of VEED - an online video editing platform. VEED is a fully-fledged collaborative video editing product used by many influencers, coaches and businesses for adding subtitles, captions, text, merging videos, making meme videos, turning podcasts to videos and much more.What we covered in this episode:On Veed
What is Veed?
Where did you come up with the idea?
What is your current revenue?
Had you started and failed with anything before?
What made Veed work out?
Many indie hackers are solo. You have a co-founder split 50/50 on the business, do you think it's worth indie hackers going out to find a co-founder?
There are many online video editing tools out there. Wavve, Headliner, Kapwing. What makes Veed different and how has that fed into your growth?
On growth and marketing
Veed has grown super quickly, but how did you get your first 100 users?
Then how did you convert them to paying customers?
Your marketing strategy. What did you do at the start for your growth?
When you started generating revenue, you hired content creators. Why?
What are your tips for marketing without budget?
Biggest mistakes / advice you'd give to founders
Recommendations
Favourite indie hacker is Josh Pigford.
Best book for indie hackers; Traction.
Favourite podcast; How I Built This.
Follow SabbaTwitterFollow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Thanks to Weekend Club for sponsoring Indie Bites.‘I absolutely love being part of Weekend Club.’‘Huge fan of Weekend Club and I love being part of it.’‘Absolutely love this community.’These are real testimonials for Weekend Club - the internet’s most helpful community for bootstrappers. If you’ve ever struggled meeting other solo founders and staying accountable, then this is for you.We offer weekly Saturday deep working sessions with up to 30 bootstrappers, such as the founders of Simple Poll and VEED, an active Slack community and over 100 software discounts.Go to weekendclub.co and enter a very limited promo code ‘Indie Bites’ for 50% off your first month.Full transcript coming soon.
9/24/2020 • 15 minutes
What's important for indie hackers in 2020 - Courtland Allen, Indie Hackers
Courtland Allen founded Indie Hackers in 2016, grew the business $8k MRR with sponsors, and then sold to Stripe 9 months later. An inspirational story that doesn't end there. Courtland has now been working from within Stripe for the past 4 years, where he continues to build on the platform and produce the excellent Indie Hackers podcast. He's a fountain of knowledge and I think you'll love this episode.What we covered in this episode:On Indie Hackers:
Why did Courtland start IH?
What is an 'indie hacker'?
What are the pros and cons of building within Stripe?
Does he have goals for IH set by Stripe?
Does he have any other side projects, aside from IH?
On indie hacking:
Where should new indie hackers start?
How do you stay motivated as a one-person team?
The growth of communities
The growth of paid newsletters
The current state of bootstrapping
Quick fire
Favourite indie hackers are; Lynne Tye, Rosie Sherry, Amy Hoy, Natalie Nagele.
Best book for indie hackers; Thinking, Fast and Slow, Sapiens, Hooked.
Favourite podcast; Conversations with Tyler.
Follow CourtlandTwitterFollow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Thanks to Weekend Club for sponsoring Indie Bites.‘I absolutely love being part of Weekend Club.’‘Huge fan of Weekend Club and I love being part of it.’‘Absolutely love this community.’These are real testimonials for Weekend Club - the internet’s most helpful community for bootstrappers. If you’ve ever struggled meeting other solo founders and staying accountable, then this is for you.We offer weekly Saturday deep working sessions with up to 30 bootstrappers, such as the founders of Simple Poll and VEED, an active Slack community and over 100 software discounts.Go to weekendclub.co and enter a very limited promo code ‘Indie Bites’ for 50% off your first month.Full TranscriptJames: Courtland has inspired so many of us to build our profitable internet businesses. Let's talk to him to find out what's important as an indie hacker in 2020. Courtland, welcome to the podcast. How are you?Courtland: Excellent James. Thanks for having me.James: To set the scene and for those that might not know, tell me a little bit more about what Indie Hackers is and why you started the website?Courtland: Yeah. So I moved to the Bay Area when I was like 23. I wanted to start a very stereotypical high growth tech startup. I wanted to be a unicorn company. I wanted to make billions and be world famous. After seven or so years of that struggle, I was just tired of it. I got tired of the VC funded software world.And so I took time off work. I was doing a lot of contract development and I just started searching for other examples of people who've done the same thing. And it turns out there wasn't really a good way to learn how to do this. Everybody online was doing the same thing I was doing; just like looking for comments left by Pieter Levels or like tweets where some people would share some tidbit of their story, but like we couldn't find anything great. And so I kind of just solved my own problem and said, you know, I should build the thing that helps people do this. I was surprised it didn't exist. And here we are 4 years later, somewhat ironically, I decided that I wanted to be a bootstrapper. I decided that I wanted to get out of the high growth startup game.And within a year, starting Indie Hackers, it was acquired by Stripe and fulfilled one of the goals of a lot of people in the high growth startup game want to. So that's how we got to where we are today.James: What is your definition of an indie hacker?Courtland: I think Tyler Tringas actually put it well recently. He said that "the new American dream is to build a profitable, sustainable, remote software business that you can run from home ". You can run from wherever you want work with wherever you want, that scales nicely, and that prints money for you. And I think an indie hacker is somebody who's trying to achieve that. Someone who doesn't like the status quo, someone who doesn't want to work for the man for the rest of their life.There's no problem with doing that. I think jobs provide a lot of stability for people, a lot of predictability, but if you're like me, you just don't want to have a boss. You don't want there to be a cap on your salary. You don't want somebody else telling you what to work on. You want to control your own life and you're an indie hacker.James: What are the challenges and benefits of building Indie Hackers from within Stripe?Courtland: I don't have to get on the phone with advertisers anymore. Indie Hackers makes $0. It's a hundred percent just me focusing on making the community good and helping it grow. I think probably the one challenge is that I'm someone who puts a lot of pressure on my shoulders to, I think, perform well for others. And at Stripe, Patrick Collison is my boss. He went out on a limb and acquired Indie Hackers, and I feel a lot of pressure to make sure that any hackers, is a success.And at Stripe, like I'm extremely autonomous. I talk to Patrick and the team there once every three months, once every six months, sometimes, and it's almost always just check-ins; how are you doing? Do you need anything? What can we help with et cetera? It's like the ideal working situation. I can't imagine having a job under any other kind of framework.James: Are you tied to any goals within Stripe? Do they set any targets for you that you have to reach, such as traffic numbers or engagement? Courtland: There isn't any sort of like you have to reach X number or the axe will fall. I think what's cool about the fact that I joined Stripe is that my goals are very much aligned with theirs. And I think if you ever work with any sort of partner or you acquire anyone or you get acquired, you should always try to make sure your goals are aligned because if there's even a one degree difference between where you want to go and where they go, at first that's very small, but after a number of years, that gap has widened into something that's like very hard to fix. And so I just want Indie Hackers to be like as big and as meaningful and useful as possible. I think about that religiously every single day. And that's what Stripe wants to ultimately they want more people starting companies. They want those companies to succeed and make a whole bunch of money because then Stripe makes money. So there's really like perfect alignment. There's no need for Stripe to tell me what to do, or force me to do things that I don't want and vice versa. I'm not really pushing against the Stripe mothership in any way.James: Do you have any sort of side projects you want to work on or the urge to do indie hacking outside of working on Indie Hackers and for Stripe?Courtland: Every day I wake up, it's like, well, what am I going to work on today? Am I going to build out a network of podcasts? Am I going to create like a milestones leaderboard that's similar to Product Hunt, but for indie hackers. Am I going to create like a groups interface so indie hackers can create their own communities? And so I already feel like I have a ton of side projects.James: Let's move on a little bit to indie hacking in general and what advice you can give to current indie hackers. How about those that are at the start of their journey with indie hacking. where should they start?Courtland: Those are the best indie hackers. In fact, that's most indie hackers. Most people don't know what to work on and they're not sure what to start. And I think the first thing you should do is probably ask yourself what it is you want in the first place.Like, why do you want to be an indie hacker? Who inspired you? What do you want to accomplish?Usually, the answer is some form of freedom, but there's lots of different forms of freedom. Do you want the creative freedom to work on whatever you want? Do you want to work from wherever you want? Like how much money do you need to make?These are all really important questions because I think if you set out to do something without knowing what your goals are and knowing what would help you feel accomplished, then when you eventually hit that goal, it doesn't feel that great because you don't even realize that you hit it and you don't know if you should keep going, you should change directions, et cetera.So, I always advise people to start off by just like spending an hour or two, just asking yourself what you want, who you are, what kinds of things make you happy in life? I just think it's really important to know who you are and what's gonna make you happy. Second. I think you've gotta avoid the common pitfalls of idea generation. For example, we all think that starting a company is like having an invention, right?A real business idea, I think should start. Always from the problem, not from the solution. People are driven to take actions in the world because they're trying to fulfil their desires because they're trying to solve problems. And if you want people to take action in the direction of the thing that you built, you need to understand their desires and their problems and make sure that the thing that you build solves that.But if you're trying to come up with an idea, I would say, just get obsessed with the problem and don't fall into the trap of thinking that it needs to be some problem that no one's ever solved before. James: Yeah, I think it was absolutely sound advice. A lot of indie hackers are solo founders and sometimes it can be isolating when you're a one person team working away in your business. What's your advice about getting stuff done and staying motivated as a one person team?Courtland: Even though, like I started Indie Hackers as a one person team. Right before I joined Stripe, I brought in my brother to work with me and we talked to each other on the phone every day. I'm a huge fan of social accountability. We're social creatures. We care a lot about what other people think about us. We don't want to let down our coworkers. We don't want to let down our colleagues. So I think as a founder when you've gone from probably working a job your whole life to suddenly being on your own, and you don't have a boss, you don't have coworkers, you don't have anybody who expects anything and no one even knows what's on your to do list, it can be a bit jarring. And you might think, oh, what I need to do is figure out all these different productivity hacks to really push myself to work harder, but I think, the ultimate productivity hack is just have someone that you're accountable to.Have a mentor, a partner, a co-founder. It could be your customers. Early on with Indie Hackers I just resolved that every week I was going to send an email to my mailing list and it was going to have a section right at the top where I said; this is what I did this week and here's what I'm going to get done next week.I can't skip out on it. I can't let this other person down.James: Yeah, that's something that I've personally found really useful. We're seeing a lot more communities pop up, especially paid communities. And there was a post on Indie Hackers about trends that are coming up, and got a great answer or some thoughts about communities and why they're becoming more and more popular now. Why is it you think that?Courtland: I think communities are the future. Being social is one of the main things that we do as human beings, we care about being parts of communities. We care about relating to others. If you look at the 2010s, we always had these huge social networks. We had Twitter, we have Facebook and those are great in their own way, but there's a lot of problems with them that I'm sure everybody can enumerate. And so we're starting to see communities unbundle these huge social networks. We're starting to see people create more niche, interest based or personality based communities around certain topics. Besides that, I think there's just a flywheel effect that's accelerating things. You have more and more people joining these communities who are realizing that they want some sort of social connection with people online, especially with COVID-19 and everybody stuck at home.I think that gives people creating communities more incentive to create them. Because now, "Hey, my community is going to grow". There's so many people who want online community, like maybe I should start this. Maybe it's a good business model for me. Maybe it's like a fun way for me to connect or learn from other people.And then once people start creating more communities and you have other companies that create tools that make it easier to create communities. Cause it's kinda like selling shovels to people during a gold rush, right? Whenever people were doing something you want to make tools for those people and help them do it better.So there's been an absolute explosion in the past year of people creating community building websites, community building tools, community building blog posts, community building podcasts. And all of that in turn makes it way easier to build a community. So now the whole flywheel repeats, more people build communities, more people join communities, more people build tools for communities, et cetera. James: We've also seen a growth in newsletters and paid newsletters. Why have we seen that?Courtland: I think when it comes to newsletters and writing and especially podcasting, I put them all in one bucket. A lot of them are cults of personality. A lot of them are people realizing that they don't necessarily want to read the mainstream news. And I think this has been true on the internet for quite some time, but I think that the growth of social media has really allowed people who have been writing on their own blogs and writing on their own newsletters to distribute what they've been doing to a wider audience. And then the growth of tools like Stripe and Patreon and just the acceptance of people making online payments has led these creators to realize; "okay, I can charge money for this". I think we're at an inflection point where people are tremendously inspired by seeing some of the numbers that a few individuals have been putting up. You start to think;" Hey, maybe I should have a blog where I write about tech topics three or four days a week and see what I can do."It's just this formula of inspiration, which I think about a lot at indie hackers, which is, you show a story of someone doing something just amazing and making a ton of money, something that people can relate to you, they can imagine how it would change their lives. Then you break down how they're doing it and you make it approachable, and you talk about the person's background and you show how they're approachable too.In other words, you relay the message. Hey, you could do this too. And that's like the trifecta formula for inspiring people to do things. James: Why is it that indie hackers are so open with sharing numbers? What's the benefit of that? Courtland: I think it's just a, consequence of the infinite distribution provided by the internet. Anyone can put up any sort of website, whether it's true, whether it's fake news, whether it's credible or whether it's good, whether it's bad. If you write something that engages people and you figure it out, how to distribute it, then you can get the eyeballs.It means that there's just more information out there for people to learn from, if you go to indiehackers.com/interviews, there's like 500 stories there where people say:Here's how I came up with my idea. Here's exactly how much money I'm making today. Here's what I was thinking I wrote the first few lines of code. It's an immensely useful resource for learning how to do things cause everybody's so transparent. And then when you go out there, you want to pay it forward because you learn from all these transparent people and so you're more likely to be transparent yourself.James: Yeah, absolutely. And you mentioned that you've got over 500 interviews on the site you're 173 episodes of the podcast - you speak to a lot of indie hackers. What is your view on the current state of bootstrapping, where there are so many people now starting businesses and seeing this as an opportunity where they've got a little bit extra time?Courtland: Yeah, I think Indie Hackers is bigger than ever. You mentioned bootstrapping in particular, it's funny, I've seen the erosion of the line between bootstrapping and fundraising in the last four or five years. People, when I started Indie Hackers were so religious and dogmatic about bootstrapping, and I kind of was too. But now we're seeing more investors who are figuring out models that allow them to fund these smaller indie hacker type projects and still make a return on their investment. If you're an indie hacker and now there are options where you don't even have to quit your job or take a leap or, work on the side of your job and you can actually just get some funding. That's just another force that's gonna spur people to start more and more businesses.James: Definitely. Courtland, we'll end on a few quick fire questions. First of all, who's an indie hacker you admire or who should people follow?Courtland: Lynne Tye. One of my best friends is just absolutely crushing it with her website, Key Values. Rosie Sherry, obviously. She's one of the first people that I interviewed for Indie Hackers. But it's hard to pick like a favorite indie hacker.James: What about your favorite book for indie hackers to read?Courtland: uh, the books that have helped me the most are books, like Thinking Fast and Slow. Sapiens. And then maybe particularly for indie hackers, there's a book called Hooked, which talks all about habit formation and what goes into the products and devices and apps and websites that allow us to form habits that we have positive associations within our life.So I think that's a really good book and it's really influenced my thinking and how I build Indie Hackers.James: A great list of books. What about podcasts? Courtland: My favorite podcast is. Conversations with Tyler, which has nothing to do with indie hackers. But again, I think it's good to listen broadly. I've recently become a big fan of the Indie Bites podcast with James McKinven. But there's just such a growing and vibrant ecosystem of podcasts out there. It's hard to pick a favorite.James: Some more great options. And then finally, what are you most excited about for the future? Both in personal life and business. I know you're on a trip away from San Francisco at the moment.Courtland: Yeah, I'm really excited about just getting older. A lot of people hate getting older, but I've recently become more at peace with it. My friend said:"Getting older as a privileged, denied to many" and looking at it through that lens. I think I've really just appreciated getting older and wiser and calmer.James: Awesome. Courtland again, thank you so much for coming on fantastic as ever. Courtland: Thanks, James. James: Thank you so much for listening to this episode of Indie Bites. I hope you feel as inspired as I do after listening to this conversation with Courtland. If you'd like to hear more, there's actually a 45 minute extended version of this episode available to my mailing list subscribers. So if you'd like to listen head over to indiebites.co pop your email into the subscribe field, and I'll send you the extended conversation. If you find this episode useful what i'd love you to share it with just one other indie hacker that will also find it useful. It really does help the podcast grow.As always you'll find links to everything we discussed in the show notes. That's all from me. Enjoy the rest of your day.
9/21/2020 • 15 minutes, 5 seconds
$3k MRR with 600 paying members writing about mindful productivity - Anne-Laure Le Cunff, Ness Labs
Anne-Laure Le Cunff is the founder of Ness Labs, a learning platform dedicated to mindful productivity while also studying neuroscience part-time at King's College with her masters. Previously Anne-Laure worked at Google leaving that job in 2017. As part of Ness Labs, she creates some truly exceptional content that I've had shared with me time and time again, which is evidenced by her 19,000 strong email lists for her newsletter, Maker Mind.Here's what we covered in this episode:On Ness Labs
Tell me a little about your back story and why you started Ness Labs?
What is Ness Labs?
When did you start generating revenue?
What have you done to grow the membership & newsletter subscribers?
Neuroscience at King's College on the side! How does that help you research and write articles?
You're a proponent of building in public, what are the benefits of this for indie hackers?
You have a sizeable audience, how do you cut through the noise / deal with the inbound?
What advice would you give to aspiring female indie hackers navigating a male-dominated sector?
On mindful productivity
What is mindful productivity?
You're a prolific writer, how do you get so much done?!
Time management article
It can be long and hard to grow a side-project / business, how do you stay motivated?
As indie hackers, what are the best ways to stay on top of everything and not get overwhelmed?
Taking care of yourself. Sleep, taking breaks, journaling. Why is it important and why do so many people neglect it?
Quick fire
Favourite book is 50 Great Myths of Popular Psychology
Anne-Laure doesn't listen to podcasts 😱
Follow Marie Denis, Steph Smith and Rosie Sherry
Follow Anne-Laure
Twitter
Ness Labs
Follow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Full TranscriptJames: Anne-Laure, welcome to the podcast. How are you doing? Anne-Laure: Great. Thanks for having me.James: Good to have you. Tell me a little bit more about Ness Labs for people who don't know? What's it all about?Anne-Laure: Ness Labs is a platform for ambitious makers, knowledge workers, creators who want to be their most productive and creative without sacrificing or mental health, and so it offers content, a community, and also coaching for people to achieve these goals. James: Yeah. And where did you come up with the idea? Anne-Laure: I both at Google and while working at startups, I went through burnout and I think lots of ambitious people have this experience at some point in their work life. And when I was looking for resources to help me go through this, there's actually wasn't much out there. So it started with this goal of helping people really taking care of their mental health at work.I've always been fascinated with how the mind works, how the brain works, how do we think, or where do ideas come from? How do we make decisions? So that's always been an area that I've been really curious about.James: Yeah, absolutely. Where are you at now in terms of subscribers and revenue with Ness Labs? And was it always generating revenue?Anne-Laure: So in the first six months of Ness Labs, most of the revenue was coming from sponsors. And I didn't really like this model because it meant having to chase them, a lot of back and forth. Also quite irregular revenue where some weeks, I have three sponsors reaching out and saying, "hey, can I start with the newsletter?"and some weeks there was no one. I figured that really wanted to have some recurring revenue that I could, even if it was growing slowly, sell something that is a bit more stable. And at this point I have about 600 members and the Ness Labs community generating about $3,000 a month.And that doesn't include all of the, one time revenue that nest labs leaking through books and other products that I'm selling.James: It's amazing how you've grown it and I think that there'll be a lot of indie hackers who are at that level where they're trying to build something up and deciding on a monetization model. Why at the start did you go for the sponsorship route and also, how did you start to build your newsletter list, which made it appealing for sponsors?Anne-Laure: At the very beginning, with the sponsors, I didn't really have any outbound process. I just grew the newsletter and I made it clear with the little inserts and signed it, that there was a spot here. So if any reader was also either an entrepreneur or working at a company that was relevant to the audience, I was reaching that they could just reply back and claim that spot for the next newsletter. There was no outbound work, but I think that making it very clear that this spot existed and also having a very niche topic made it appealing to sponsors because they could in one go reach a certain amount of people.The audience; I can really think Twitter, I think, for most of my subscribers. James: How beneficial has that Twitter following been for you? Cause you have about 30,000 Twitter followers. And over how long was that built? Was there a specific time where you just started growing or was it quite linear?Anne-Laure: It was very linear and slow for years and I think up to two years ago, I only have 3000 followers. It took off pretty recently. And I think it's because I really changed the way I used it. I used to just post whatever articles I was reading, not really contributing value.Whereas now I'm really trying to help people and I really use Twitter to work public. So I really show people my process. I show unfinished articles. Sometimes I ask questions.I do polls where I really ask the community, what do you think about this? Should I write about this or that? And I think the fact that I switched from just broadcasting content on Twitter, to working in public with the garage door open, has been one of the main reasons why my following has grown so fast in the past year. I think lots of entrepreneurs make the mistake of falling prey to the planning fallacy. Where you spend so much time trying to figure out how am I going to go about this? What's the best framework to build this? And which library should I use? And how am I going to do this and that? And I think for me, building in public is a way to fight the planning fallacy, where instead of waiting until they have something absolutely perfect that I can put in the world, I just share little nuggets of my progress and I can get feedback much quicker.So it shortens the feedback loop too, which is especially I think for indie hackers that don't have a lot of resources, is a great thing to do because instead of wasting a lot of time and money potentially going in the wrong direction, you can very quickly adjust. And so that's, for me, that's one of the main benefits of working in public.James: You talk about mindful productivity a lot. What is mindful productivity?Anne-Laure: So a lot of the productivity strategies and content that is out there are really about getting things done. It's about productivity for the sake of productivity and it's about getting as much stuff done as possible. Mindful productivity is about taking a step back and asking yourself, do I really need to do this thing?Am I the right person to do it? Is it the best way to go about it? And it's really about being mindful of the way you work, the way you think, the way you feel. So you can be your most productive while also taking care of your mental health. So you can work on something and being there for the long run. And I think it's particularly relevant for indie hackers, where very often you're a solo entrepreneur.You're the only person having to wear all of these hats and do all of these things. And as we mentioned, there's just so many hours in a day.James: Sometimes they might feel overwhelmed with the amount of stuff they've got going on, all the different hats they've got to wear, prioritization and maybe some even struggle with loneliness. What are the best ways to stay on top of everything and not get overwhelmed?Anne-Laure: The most important thing is to create space for self-reflection. A big mistake that we make, especially when we're passionate about our business is to keep on pushing through. And when we do this, we very often miss some early signs of potential burnout and burnout can actually be quite easy to manage if you catch it early.So making sure that however busy things get, creating that space and that time for self reflection and for really thinking about how do I feel right now? Am I feeling rested? Am I feeling tired? Am I feeling anxious? Am I feeling excited? Do I have enough time for thinking about what I'm doing right now versus just going through my to do list, without any reflection.So that's, for me, the number one most important thing when it comes to mindful productivity is taking that time, and it can take different forms. In my case, I block one hour every Sunday evening where I just write and journal. I look at what went well, what didn't and what I want to focus on for the next week.Other people find that having a thinking buddy is also helpful, where you have one person and every week you block an hour and you literally ask yourself, how are you doing? How is your week? And what do you expect from the coming week? So there's lots of different ways to go about it, but creating that space and blocking time for it is the most helpful thing.James: Why do you think a lot of solo founders and indie hackers tend to neglect that? Anne-Laure: There is a lot of toxic productivity advice out there where some successful entrepreneurs talk about how the wake up at 5:00 AM and then they go for another run and they work until then 10:00 PM. And they also miraculously have time to see their friends and family.This is toxic. I'm not saying they're lying. If this is really the life you're living every day, this is really their routine, good for them. That works for you, but projecting what works for you onto other people and creating this insecurity for other entrepreneurs, we're thinking, "Oh, I'm not as productive as I should be, because look at this person." So I think definitely one reason is all of the productivity porn that is out there and that's giving a false image of what productivity to read looks like and what can you achieve.And the second thing is, geuinely people being passionate about their work. When it's your own business, very often, you care a lot more than if you're working for another company and that's a good thing, but that also needs to be managed. So managing your passion is also a very important thing.James: Yeah, I'm from the outside Anne-Laure, you're a prolific writer. How do you get so much done?Anne-Laure: I block time for the things that matter. And I don't mean blocking time by filling my whole... if you look at my calendar right now, it's almost empty. And I block time for the things that I really want to achieve each week. So for example, I have an hour and a half blocked every morning to write. Every Monday I look at my calendar and I'm like, okay, what are the top three things that I really need to do this week? And I make sure they happen. If the rest doesn't happen, that's completely fine. So I don't actually think I get more done than other people, but I really focus my efforts on the few things that I really think matter. James: I'll leave a link to your time management article, where you actually have a screenshot of your calendar with some of those recurring events in the show notes. I'd like to sort of round off on a topic which is women indie hackers in this community that is male dominated, both indie hackers and tech. What advice would you give to both, women in the hackers and us guys on what we can do to help include female indie hackers?Anne-Laure: I'm very lucky that very early on in my indie hacker hacker journey I found a group called Women Make . It's led by a woman called Marie who's amazing and has fostered this great, inclusive community where women can come and talk about their business and their challenges and ask questions and work together.So my advice for women who are looking to connect with other women who are also solo entrepreneurs would be to join that group.James: What about the guys? What should we do be more inclusive? Anne-Laure: There are a few things that I think would be helpful. First, if you're on Twitter and you ever do these threads where you're listing other entrepreneurs or resources that are helpful to other people, just check the list very quickly and see if there are women in it. And that seems like a simple thing, but the number of times I see those lists of saying, here are the best entrepreneurs in that field and there's no women in it. And the second thing in your interaction with women also online, don't assume they don't know what they're talking about. So many interactions where I post something and obviously Twitter only has 280 characters and so I just post a short version, the number of mansplaining that I get sometimes where I have men jumping in my replies and saying, Oh, actually also this and this. And I know. I actually study those things. It's a tweet. You would not be doing this to another man, but you're doing this to me.James: Yeah, I think that's sound advice. And thanks for being open about it. On that thing we'll round up on a few quick fire questions. The first one being who are some good female in the hackers that we can all follow?Anne-Laure: Yeah, so I'll have so many. Marie Denis, who's the founder of Woman Make, first. She's amazing. Steph Smith. who works at The Hustle now, and who's an amazing content expers, SEO experts. There's also 'Clo', who, is a UX researcher and she's doing amazing work, understanding how to create websites that actually convert . There's Rosie, you mentioned who's amazing. And she needs community at Indie Hackers and she also creating her own newsletter and I think right now, 75% of her content is behind a pay wall. And she's spoken about it and experimenting with it . I have so many but that's going to be my like three ones for now.James: And then final few questions. Best book for indie hackers? I've heard, you mentioned How to Change Your Mind before, so a different book to that.Anne-Laure: I would recommend 50 great myth of popular psychology. James: and favorite podcast to listen to, youAnne-Laure: I don't listen to podcasts.James: Refreshing to hear. and then finally, what are you most excited about for the future either personally or in business?Anne-Laure: I think in the future, I'm going to keep on working on the same mission, which is helping people be as creative and productive as possible. I don't know exactly how that's going to look like, but this is also why my company is called Ness Labs. It's really a lab where I can experiment and try new things and see if they work or they don't. So I'm currently working on creating an online course, for example, and if this is something that works, I might create more in the future and if it doesn't, I may take Ness Labs in a different direction.James: Amazing. Anne-Laure, thank you so much for joining the podcast. I've thoroughly enjoyed this. Anne-Laure: Thank you.
9/18/2020 • 15 minutes, 46 seconds
Starting over 40 side-projects in 10 years - Helen Ryles
Helen Ryles is a prolific indie hacker, having launched over 40 projects in the last 10 years, selling a few of them along the way. Helen is a proponent of the no code movement, advocating for the tools that allow non-technical folks, like me, create amazing projects. To tie in with this, she also runs the community at Makerpad, the no-code education and community platform.Thanks to Weekend Club for sponsoring Indie Bites.‘I absolutely love being part of Weekend Club.’‘Huge fan of Weekend Club and I love being part of it.’‘Absolutely love this community.’These are real testimonials for Weekend Club - the internet’s most helpful community for bootstrappers. If you’ve ever struggled meeting other solo founders and staying accountable, then this is for you.We offer weekly Saturday deep working sessions with up to 30 bootstrappers, such as the founders of Simple Poll and VEED, an active Slack community and over 100 software discounts.Go to weekendclub.co and enter a very limited promo code ‘Indie Bites’ for 50% off your first month.Here's what we covered in this episodeOn side projects
How did you start indie hacking?
What are you currently working on?
Where do you come up with ideas?
How do you define a side-project?
Having launched so many, what is your process for getting an idea up and running, validated and then deciding how long you run with it before it gets sold / canned?
You wrote a great thread on selling side projects. How do you know when it's time to sell?
How do you sell a side project?!
On no-code
You joined Makerpad last month to help run their community. Tell me a little bit more about what Makerpad is and what your role will be there.
What is no-code and why do you think it's important?
What are some of the most exciting things you've seen people do with no-code?
What are the non-obvious benefits of no-code?
What are the best no-code tools?
Recommendations
Book: Authority
Podcast: Side Hustle School
Indie Hacker: Michael Gill
Follow HelenTwitterFollow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
[Full transcription coming soon]
9/16/2020 • 15 minutes, 7 seconds
Building Marketing Examples to 30k email subscribers - Harry Dry, Marketing Examples
Harry Dry is the founder of Marketing Examples, a fast-growing showcase of successful startup marketing stories. When I first spoke to Harry on the Marketing Mashup about a year ago, he was on 5,000 subscribers and £1k revenue. Now, he has 6x that amount with 30,000 subscribers and 50,000 Twitter followers. An incredible growth story from a smart marketer.In 2022, Harry also created Copywriting Examples, the site for anyone writing new copy. Here's what we covered in this episode:On Marketing Examples
I've given a little summary of Marketing Examples, how would you describe it?
Where did you come up with the idea?
How is your revenue shaping up with the audience you have?
If you could choose one case study as your favourite, which one would it be?
On Audience Building
When you first started Marketing Examples, how did you get your first 100 subscribers?
You're an expert on Twitter, now with 50k followers. What did it take to grow a Twitter audience so large, so quickly?
What's been the biggest struggle building Marketing Examples?
What advice would you give to other indie hackers trying to build an audience?
Talk me through your decision to add a new personal touch to Marketing Examples?
Tell me the Kanye Story in 30 seconds
Recommendations
Book: Man's Search for Meaning
Podcast: IFL TV
Indie Hacker: Pat Walls
Links
Follow Harry on Twitter
Marketing Examples
Marketing Examples Twitter
Follow Me
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Thanks to Weekend Club for sponsoring Indie Bites.‘I absolutely love being part of Weekend Club.’‘Huge fan of Weekend Club and I love being part of it.’‘Absolutely love this community.’These are real testimonials for Weekend Club - the internet’s most helpful community for bootstrappers. If you’ve ever struggled meeting other solo founders and staying accountable, then this is for you.We offer weekly Saturday deep working sessions with up to 30 bootstrappers, such as the founders of Simple Poll and VEED, an active Slack community and over 100 software discounts.Go to weekendclub.co and enter a very limited promo code ‘Indie Bites’ for 50% off your first month.
9/10/2020 • 15 minutes, 27 seconds
Growing a paid community to $800 MRR - Charlie Ward, Ramen Club (prev. Weekend Club)
In this episode we discuss:On Ramen Club (formerly Weekend Club)
How would you describe Ramen Club?
Where did you come up with the idea for Ramen Club & IndieBeers?
What was your initial plan for making revenue with Ramen Club?
What's your revenue now?
What have you done specifically to grow those first few users?
On Community Building
You've cultivated quite the community in London, why did you choose to build the community here?
What does it take to build an active community? Is it as simple as just setting up a Slack and a Stripe account and away you go?
What's been the biggest struggle building the community?
What advice would you give to other indie hackers trying to build a community?
Recommendations
Book: Influence
Podcast: The Knowledge Project
Indie Hacker: Wilhelm Klopp
Links
Follow Charlie on Twitter
Ramen Club (formerly Weekend Club)
Indie London
Indie Beers
Follow Me👉 Listen to my new podcast, No More Mondays.
Twitter
Indie Bites Twitter
Personal Website
Buy A Wallet
2 Hour Podcast Course
9/7/2020 • 13 minutes, 37 seconds
Indie Bites Trailer - what's it all about?
I'm your host James McKinven, I'm the founder of a podcasting company called Striqo and passionate indie hacker.Now I love long podcasts and what Courtland Allen has done with the Indie Hackers show, but this podcast will just supplement that. With less commuting, we now have less time to listen to podcasts and those long, albeit interesting, backstories. I'll aim to cut to the chase and find out what it really takes to build a sustainable, profitable business on the side.I'm James, I run a podcast company called Striqo and I love hearing about the ups and downs of what it takes to be an indie hacker.I'm a fellow indie hacker and side-project-starter and I love hearing the stories of other makers who have started their businesses while working a full-time job.Whether that's a small little earner on the side or something that has grown into tens of thousands of ££ income that means you could quit your job.Having started many of my own side-projects I know how hard it is to get it off the ground and generate revenue. I wouldn't have been able to make progress on any of my projects if it wasn't for the kindness and support I've received from everyone in the Indie Hackers community.Everyone has a story to tell, advice they can give and lessons to teach - I want to share them with as many people as I can.I hope you can join me for this podcast talking to our favourite indie hackers.If you like the sound of this, please subscribe to the podcast and tweet me which indie hacker you'd like me to feature.