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#2: Bootstrappers shouldn't neglect their connections
Manage episode 338189526 series 3362798
Original Article: #2: Bootstrappers shouldn't neglect their connections
Convert your long form article to podcast? Visit SendToPod
Follow me on Twitter to find out more.
----
🚀
Product update: 2 new engine customers this week 🚀😄! yay!
I'm fiercely independent. And I'd argue that if you're building a bootstrapped software business you probably are as-well.
How do I know that?
Well, think about it! You have no funding, no team, and (likely) no co-founder either. If you need a logo designed, you design it. If you need a landing page built, you build it. And If you need a blog post written, you write it. And, compared to our funded counterparts, money can't do the work for you.
Despite this, our independence is our superpower. The ability to rely on nobody is essentially recession proof. It can't walk out the door someday. It can't run out of budget. And it's not going to cost more with inflation. But, left unchecked, this can become one of your greatest weaknesses.
You see, independence is empowering on the way up, but it's lonely on the way down. And in entrepreneurship it's equally as important to survive the crashes as it is to ride the growth.
This week, I had three important moments teach me this lesson.
Friday
Last Friday, I went to a cabin with some friends. We get there and start working on our respective jobs. I took the day to work on Engine. At one point, I read aloud a draft of my blog post. After hearing it, one friend said, "Wow, that's really good you should post that to LinkedIn".
And so I did.
This is something I wanted to do, but I was too afraid to. It's scary putting yourself out there. And even more scary doing it in-front of people you know. However, it doesn't take much to overcome fear. And in this case, all it took was one sentence from one friend.
Find that friend. And, maybe more importantly, be that friend for the people around you.
Monday
On Monday, I got coffee with a friend of mine who's also bootstrapping an app. He's been working full-time on his app for many months and we had some really good deep chats about that experience.
What's it like working on things all day? How do you pay the bills? What stresses you out?
And through this conversation I learned a lot. Not just the A,B,C,D bullet-list takeaways. But, the undercurrent of the conversation as-well. There was moments where he'd sigh and I could tell a certain topic was stressful. Or he'd give a look of curiosity when something struck his interest.
This undercurrent is almost non-exists during online interactions. This brings me to my second takeaway this week:
Meet people in the real world that are traveling on the same mission you are.Tuesday
On Tuesday, I met up with two established founders in the bootstrapping scene, @robwalling and @ColinHirdman.
We talked about all-things bootstrapping and life. From ways to perform idea validation, to the interesting properties of clear ice-cubes (which being a zoomer I have never heard of before). Now, both these folks were infinitely more successful than myself, but that's a good thing!
It was an opportunity to listen more than I talked.
To pick someone's brain and not only get suggestions, but get validated suggestions in return. If I think of the advice I'd give myself two years ago, I could've been infinitely helpful to myself. There's a value to experience.
And that was my tak...
190 episodes
Manage episode 338189526 series 3362798
Original Article: #2: Bootstrappers shouldn't neglect their connections
Convert your long form article to podcast? Visit SendToPod
Follow me on Twitter to find out more.
----
🚀
Product update: 2 new engine customers this week 🚀😄! yay!
I'm fiercely independent. And I'd argue that if you're building a bootstrapped software business you probably are as-well.
How do I know that?
Well, think about it! You have no funding, no team, and (likely) no co-founder either. If you need a logo designed, you design it. If you need a landing page built, you build it. And If you need a blog post written, you write it. And, compared to our funded counterparts, money can't do the work for you.
Despite this, our independence is our superpower. The ability to rely on nobody is essentially recession proof. It can't walk out the door someday. It can't run out of budget. And it's not going to cost more with inflation. But, left unchecked, this can become one of your greatest weaknesses.
You see, independence is empowering on the way up, but it's lonely on the way down. And in entrepreneurship it's equally as important to survive the crashes as it is to ride the growth.
This week, I had three important moments teach me this lesson.
Friday
Last Friday, I went to a cabin with some friends. We get there and start working on our respective jobs. I took the day to work on Engine. At one point, I read aloud a draft of my blog post. After hearing it, one friend said, "Wow, that's really good you should post that to LinkedIn".
And so I did.
This is something I wanted to do, but I was too afraid to. It's scary putting yourself out there. And even more scary doing it in-front of people you know. However, it doesn't take much to overcome fear. And in this case, all it took was one sentence from one friend.
Find that friend. And, maybe more importantly, be that friend for the people around you.
Monday
On Monday, I got coffee with a friend of mine who's also bootstrapping an app. He's been working full-time on his app for many months and we had some really good deep chats about that experience.
What's it like working on things all day? How do you pay the bills? What stresses you out?
And through this conversation I learned a lot. Not just the A,B,C,D bullet-list takeaways. But, the undercurrent of the conversation as-well. There was moments where he'd sigh and I could tell a certain topic was stressful. Or he'd give a look of curiosity when something struck his interest.
This undercurrent is almost non-exists during online interactions. This brings me to my second takeaway this week:
Meet people in the real world that are traveling on the same mission you are.Tuesday
On Tuesday, I met up with two established founders in the bootstrapping scene, @robwalling and @ColinHirdman.
We talked about all-things bootstrapping and life. From ways to perform idea validation, to the interesting properties of clear ice-cubes (which being a zoomer I have never heard of before). Now, both these folks were infinitely more successful than myself, but that's a good thing!
It was an opportunity to listen more than I talked.
To pick someone's brain and not only get suggestions, but get validated suggestions in return. If I think of the advice I'd give myself two years ago, I could've been infinitely helpful to myself. There's a value to experience.
And that was my tak...
190 episodes
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