Best of Entrepreneurship2024

  1. 1
    Article
    Avatar of asayerasayer·2y

    6 Tips: Why Front-End Developers should be Entrepreneurs

    An entrepreneurial mindset significantly enhances front-end developers' impact and career success. It facilitates a user-centered approach, innovation, and creativity, aligning their work with broader company goals. Key benefits include leveraging unique technical skills, gaining creative freedom, achieving financial independence, building a personal brand, and driving innovation. While this approach offers extensive growth potential and market differentiation, common challenges include balancing technical and business skills, financial management, market competition, and maintaining a healthy work-life balance.

  2. 2
    Article
    Avatar of hnHacker News·2y

    I've Built My First Successful Side Project, and I Hate It

    The post describes the author's journey of creating a successful side project that automatises drawing harmonic patterns on TradingView. Despite the success and financial gains, the author faced numerous challenges including maintenance fatigue, demanding customers, and handling disputes and frauds. Ultimately, the author automated various aspects of the project to reduce workload and avoid burnout, but lost interest in maintaining the project. Key lessons include the importance of setting boundaries, customer relations, and the complexities of selling B2C products.

  3. 3
    Article
    Avatar of communityCommunity Picks·2y

    How You Can Start a 5 Figure Side Business as Software Engineer

    Starting a successful side business as a software engineer involves several key steps. Begin by researching to ensure there's demand for your idea. Use service-based offers initially to build credibility and collect testimonials. Make compelling offers to attract customers and use social media to maintain visibility and engagement. Ads can help once your product is proven. A simple tech stack including a website, payment processing, appointment scheduling, and creative tools can keep costs low. Consider the advantages of entrepreneurship versus driving innovation in your current job for higher earnings.

  4. 4
    Article
    Avatar of workchroniclesWork Chronicles·2y

    (comic) Start your own business

    Comics about work culture and starting a business, created with passion and humor. Subscribe to Work Chronicles for more engaging depictions of professional life.

  5. 5
    Article
    Avatar of cletueowanaTechguy@20·2y

    We need to build thing not looking for job

    Developers possess the power to create and build anything. Instead of focusing solely on job hunting, they should consider using their skills to start their own ventures and create their own opportunities.

  6. 6
    Video
    Avatar of TechWithTimTech With Tim·2y

    How To Make Money From Coding - A Complete Guide

    Learn strategies to make money from coding, leveraging skills developed over time. The guide discusses transitioning from jobs to freelancing, potential income, and various earning methods, including coding tutorials, personal branding, and technical writing. It emphasizes the importance of professional behavior, reputation, and thinking long term for sustainable income. Additionally, mindset shifts and leveraging one's time effectively are crucial for maximizing earnings as a coding entrepreneur.

  7. 7
    Article
    Avatar of communityCommunity Picks·2y

    5 Reasons Why Your Side Projects Fail to Make Money And How to Avoid Them

    Turning side projects into profitable ventures involves recognizing and navigating common pitfalls. Key mistakes include not trying at all, improper ideation, getting stuck in endless building phases, neglecting user feedback, and shy launches. Embrace failure as a learning tool, validate ideas through thorough brainstorming, avoid overcomplicating builds, seek regular user feedback, and plan strategic product launches. Each step offers an opportunity for growth and refinement.

  8. 8
    Article
    Avatar of hnHacker News·1y

    my second year without a job

    The poster reflects on their second year without a traditional job, having initially quit due to personal reasons with $80K in savings. They describe their year’s journey, including financial challenges, collaborative entrepreneurial projects, maintaining mental health through co-living, and indulging in hobbies like music and sports. The individual acknowledges the setbacks but focuses on the positive experiences gained, aiming for personal growth and sustainable success in the upcoming year.

  9. 9
    Article
    Avatar of communityCommunity Picks·2y

    My $1m plan

    A 30-year-old developer outlines a 10-year plan to become a millionaire by launching and monetizing various apps and products. The goal is to achieve financial freedom through a diversified approach including YouTube, eBooks, coding courses, SaaS, and community building. The plan also involves learning backend development and marketing skills, and using paid ads. The author intends to document the journey from $0 to $1m, sharing experiences and insights along the way.

  10. 10
    Article
    Avatar of communityCommunity Picks·2y

    Move Slow and Fix Things

    The author reflects on the disillusionment with Silicon Valley's 'hustle culture' and 'move fast and break things' mindset, advocating instead for sustainable growth, robust solutions, and a long-term mindset. They emphasize the value of small, meaningful projects over unicorn ambitions and criticize the glorification of venture capital. The post encourages moving deliberately and fixing existing problems rather than chasing quick success and offers alternatives to traditional startup models, highlighting that success can come from small-scale, ethical operations.

  11. 11
    Article
    Avatar of monkeyuserMonkeyuser·2y

    Fund Raising

    Provides insights and strategies for successful fund raising efforts, with a focus on attracting investors and avoiding common pitfalls.

  12. 12
    Article
    Avatar of communityCommunity Picks·2y

    My simple silly idea made $2000 in 2 days

    A challenge to make $1 million led to the creation of a $1,000,000 grid where each square represents $1,000 in revenue. The idea was inspired by the Million Dollar Homepage. The grid became a platform where companies could promote their products for $1,000 per square. After initial interest but no sales, a friend paid $1,000 to promote Frontend Masters, and the post went viral. Another buyer used the grid to promote a charity, raising awareness for St. Jude Children's Research Hospital. The project made $2,000 in two days and demonstrated the potential of quirky ideas.

  13. 13
    Article
    Avatar of thedevcraftThe Dev Craft·2y

    "The Idea Guy" pitching his startup to developers

    A humorous post about 'The Idea Guy' pitching his startup to developers. The linked content likely highlights the challenges and stereotypes involved in such scenarios, particularly focusing on no-code development platforms.

  14. 14
    Article
    Avatar of mtlynchMichael Lynch·2y

    I Sold TinyPilot, My First Successful Business

    The author shares their experience of selling their business, TinyPilot, after years of struggling to find success. They discuss the reasons for selling, the challenges they faced in finding a buyer, and the details of the sale. The author also reflects on their post-sale feelings and future plans.

  15. 15
    Article
    Avatar of communityCommunity Picks·2y

    My $1m actionable plan

    The author outlines a plan to become a millionaire by age 40 by focusing on three key activities: writing one article per week, creating one video per week, and building one project every two weeks. The author emphasizes the need to master skills such as writing, video making, and project building, while also acknowledging the importance of storytelling, marketing, sales, and design. The plan is designed to tackle overwhelming ideas by committing to concrete actions.

  16. 16
    Article
    Avatar of communityCommunity Picks·2y

    Top 5 Small Business Plan Ideas For Aspiring Entrepreneurs

    Aspiring entrepreneurs can explore diverse small business ideas like subscription box services, virtual event planning, personalized online learning platforms, remote work solutions, and health-tech innovations. These innovative concepts can help them succeed in today's competitive market.

  17. 17
    Article
    Avatar of hnHacker News·2y

    Running One-man SaaS, 9 Years In

    Healthchecks.io, launched in July 2015, is a one-man SaaS business. With 652 paying customers and a monthly recurring revenue of 14,043 USD, it remains sustainable and focused on balancing enjoyment with work. The founder, who works on it part-time, has no plans to expand the team, raise pricing, or broaden the service's scope. Recent updates include server upgrades and new email and storage solutions.

  18. 18
    Article
    Avatar of communityCommunity Picks·2y

    MVP is Over. You Need to Think About MVE.

    The article discusses the importance of focusing on what's valuable rather than viable in startups. It shares the story of Thomas Edison's approach to inventing the light bulb and introduces the concept of Minimum Valuable Experience (MVE). The A.C.T. framework is also explained as a way to effectively communicate with the target audience and design marketing strategies.

  19. 19
    Video
    Avatar of aaronjackAaron Jack·2y

    Why you shouldn't code app (all my mistakes) - as a software developer

    Building an app as a solopreneur involves more than just coding, and many challenges arise that are often underestimated. Key points include understanding the complexities of market competition, the importance of balancing feature complexity with user needs, and the difficulties of securing and retaining users. The post emphasizes the need for realistic expectations and the value of comprehensive planning and feedback incorporation. It also touches on the continual stress and shifting goalposts throughout the app development process.

  20. 20
    Article
    Avatar of devtoDEV·2y

    How to build your own SAAS business

    Learn how to build a successful SAAS business by building an audience, using Django for development, offering a free tier, generating expansion revenue, listing your product on various platforms, and learning from expert founders.

  21. 21
    Article
    Avatar of swlhThe Startup·2y

    Do What’s Hard So Life Becomes Easy

    Learn about the power of mental constructs in achieving goals and optimal performance. Discover the beginning, messy, and easy pattern that applies to every new task or goal. Embrace the idea that hard work leads to success.

  22. 22
    Article
    Avatar of tcTechCrunch·2y

    How 2 high school teens raised a $500K seed round for their API startup (yes, it’s AI)

    Two 18-year-old high school graduates, Christopher Fitzgerald and Nicholas Van Landschoot, raised $500,000 in pre-seed funding for their AI startup, APIGen. The platform aims to create custom APIs from natural language prompts, catering to web apps, databases, and IoT devices. With strong community support and a keen interest from Varana Capital, the founders are currently building their minimum viable product and plan to release a beta version soon.

  23. 23
    Article
    Avatar of communityCommunity Picks·2y

    How to Make Wealth

    Startups provide an effective way to amass wealth quickly by working intensely on hard technical problems, often in technology. Wealth is distinct from money, as it represents creating what people want. Startups succeed by leveraging small, highly productive teams and solving challenging problems that larger companies struggle with due to their size and bureaucracy. The post discusses the economic proposition of startups, the importance of measurement and leverage in generating wealth, and how small teams or startups can be significantly more productive than large corporations.

  24. 24
    Article
    Avatar of communityCommunity Picks·2y

    The Product-Market Fit Game

    Achieving product-market fit is a step-by-step process involving validating problems, engaging users, and refining your product. The guide highlights the five levels of product-market fit: identifying a significant problem, validating the problem, recruiting real users, retaining users, and securing paying customers. The article provides practical advice on executing each level, dealing with failure modes, and emphasizes the importance of rapid iteration, co-founding partnerships, and a strong, responsive approach to customer interaction. Pivoting when necessary and learning from customer feedback are crucial to the journey.

  25. 25
    Article
    Avatar of gcgitconnected·2y

    How I Built a Social Network in 4 Years as a Solo Developer

    The author shares their journey of building a social media platform as a solo developer, starting from the idea to the tech stack used, and the challenges faced along the way.