Why Do Most Programmers Who Start Companies Fail?

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  • čas přidán 11. 06. 2024
  • If you're a programmer tired of the corporate grind, and thinking about starting a software company - watch out. I tried this twice and failed, but the third time went much better. Here are some practical tips to avoid pitfalls as a software engineer if you want to start a software company - and be successful!
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    CHAPTER MARKERS
    0:00 Introduction
    1:05 8 Mistakes Programmers Make Starting Companies
    1:19 1. Picking a Product That's Fun To Build
    3:54 2. Choosing a Viral Business Model
    6:26 3. Overengineering
    9:00 4. Having a Fixed Mindset
    12:59 5. Spend Too Much Time Building The Product
    15:14 6. Poor Financial Management
    18:27 7. Failing To Build Networks of Help
    21:18 8. Low Self-Confidence
    #programming #startup #career
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Komentáře • 419

  • @HealthyDev
    @HealthyDev  Před 4 měsíci +29

    Are you thinking of starting a solo software product venture to escape from the corporate grind? What resistance are you facing? How do you feel about the points in the video? What else are you worried about? Let's talk about it.
    ►► Know your options! Access my FREE data hub for the top 25 software industry roles, TechRolepedia → jaymeedwards.com/access-techrolepedia/

    • @babuOOabc
      @babuOOabc Před 4 měsíci +1

      the "coolness of the products" that "you think". it all depends. the coolness of cell phone before it exist that coolnest only existed in very few minds. marketing can make a good entry it's important as capitalism its un avoid hable at many times. if your client are not satisfied step back and chalenge your or my own paradigm maybe somthing it deeply wrong etc. all paths leads to "roma" for deep solution finders. iukuk. where is the cripto add values? there is no aparent utility that centrliced services do not give?

    • @GalileoSanchez
      @GalileoSanchez Před 4 měsíci +3

      I loved the video. I already am experimenting with one product in the "backburner" I launched with paid promotions and all, but did not get that many conversions, so I am in the process of pivoting to something different and see if that works. I totally agree with most points, and I would probably overemphasize that figuring out what the customer wants is the really the most important and first step. Quickly trying out and testing different ideas is the approach that I am taking right now. My main concern is that the market I am targeting might be too small, (constrained to my country of residence), to produce a sufficient revenue to live off of.

    • @HealthyDev
      @HealthyDev  Před 4 měsíci

      @@GalileoSanchezsounds like you're on the right track. What kind of conversion rate were you looking for?

    • @bryanwalkerCT7729
      @bryanwalkerCT7729 Před 4 měsíci

      If smart watches so smart? Why no dehydration censor? #BeingSaneInInsanePlaces

    • @user-pp5mn5bl6o
      @user-pp5mn5bl6o Před 4 měsíci +2

      Be prepared to fail, and be prepared to give up. Absolutely, be self-confident, but not dellusional.

  • @troymann5115
    @troymann5115 Před 4 měsíci +243

    This video is huge. Several of my friends are going through this right now, having been laid off or quit and started their own businesses. Developers are often not prepared for the world of business.

    • @jordixboy
      @jordixboy Před 4 měsíci +26

      who would have thought that programming and creating a business is 2 completely separate worlds... Programmers often make fun of all the roles except of them, cto, product managers, leads.. thruth is all of them have their place. Being able to program doesn't mean you will build a sucesful business... Thruth is no one gives a shit about your "billion" dollar idea

    • @hopelessdecoy
      @hopelessdecoy Před 4 měsíci +31

      ​@@jordixboy Guy trying to start a software company here. It's not that I have no respect for those positions I just don't have the capital to fill them. What's different between a person starting a convenience store and myself? You wouldn't say they are arrogant.
      We don't all have a million dollar bank account for admin staff. I just do my best against companies with infinite money and try and target customers they ignore.

    • @Andrew-rc3vh
      @Andrew-rc3vh Před 4 měsíci +6

      @@jordixboy You have also got to acquire the skill of designing the product, rather than just being told what to program. The subject of design is vast in itself. There are millions of philosophies related to it. I read a large pile of books on it many years ago.

    • @jordixboy
      @jordixboy Před 4 měsíci +10

      @@Andrew-rc3vh thats still not close to what is needed. You need to know about business, entrepreneurship, product, finance, its a lot

    • @romanmir01
      @romanmir01 Před 4 měsíci +12

      I did this in 2009. I quit and started building my own software. Today I have a company, near 1000 people working for me. I went through a number of iterations, found what the clients needed...

  • @orlovskyconsultinggbr2849
    @orlovskyconsultinggbr2849 Před 4 měsíci +85

    Running a company is not the same as writing code, you deal on constant base with people and the psycology and with finance and if you have 0 luck and time to postpone difficult business decision, programmers not just aware of that, they think creating a good product is 100% gurantee of success ,but here is flash news there is no gurantee as business go up and down, what make sense a strategy and backup plans and taking and receiving favors from anyone who can help.

    • @robertmazurowski5974
      @robertmazurowski5974 Před 4 měsíci +11

      "Running a company is not the same as writing code. "
      This is so obvious yet so hidden

    • @orlovskyconsultinggbr2849
      @orlovskyconsultinggbr2849 Před 4 měsíci

      @@robertmazurowski5974 more over , if you run a company, you basically responsible for profitability and cant slack as some programmers do, sure some owners they have enough cash and capital , but for new startups its like really big challange , they dont know market, they try and fail , then there are govermental and external influences, so go figure start a company and enter a new way of running a job.

    • @T0NYD1CK
      @T0NYD1CK Před 4 měsíci

      100% correct. Good programmers are usually very bright, like working by themselves and are not overdone with people skills. Some business people have no "real" skills at all by which I mean that they can't code, mend a fuse, fix a leak, build a shed, anything "real". What they do have is the power to connect with people and spin them a good line about how good their product is. Think of Musk and Trump.
      Take Bill Gates, for instance, he bought his first operating system from someone else, made some small mods, then sold it to IBM and made $millions. He will have made more from that software than all the developers that contributed to the code combined.
      Judging by history, the plan seems to be that you need to team up with more of a people person. Think: Jobs and Wozniak, Hewlett and Packard, Gates and Allen. Don't be confused by people like Mark Zuckerberg. Facebook was originally a government project called Lifelog and when that was implemented as Facebook they made Zuckerberg the figurehead. The original aim of Lifelog was to find out everything about everybody. How is it doing?

  • @robertmazurowski5974
    @robertmazurowski5974 Před 4 měsíci +32

    Build an MVP, that will make money and is written as quickly as possible, if it makes money you get investors, and/or other coding cofounders then you can just rebuild proprerly.
    Don't write high quality code for potentially a throaway MVP.

    • @MrC0MPUT3R
      @MrC0MPUT3R Před 4 měsíci +4

      This is a double-edged sword. I work at a company now that continues to release MVPs like this and it makes maintenance and expanding functionality a nightmare. It's like running through water. No one, except the devs, wants to be the one to say "Hey, I know we have all these features we want to write, but we really should put those aside and rewrite this." So the water remains and continues to get deeper.
      This is especially true in my company because, in the early days, it was staffed almost entirely by coding bootcamp graduates.
      There is definitely a balancing act between good architecture and time to market. This is what being agile (not Agile) was meant for in the first place. Getting customer feedback early and often, including putting them in the room while you write the thing, goes a long way to preventing having to throw away the entire project. That gives you way more confidence to actually write the code well. This is something literally every company struggles with. At my company, I've advocated for communication with the customer on every project, but nearly every time there's zero communication until the very end. It's MADDENING! We know who we should be talking to but no one does it.

  • @rajatsx
    @rajatsx Před 4 měsíci +13

    You were so right about #5. I personally struggle with this a lot.
    As a developer, I obsess about every single detail on the product side. On the other hand, I pay very less attention to the business side.

  • @jemmrich
    @jemmrich Před 4 měsíci +9

    Something I see in engineering a lot is that engineers will fall back to what they know when things get hard or when they are out of their comfort zone. An engineer moving over to the manager track falling back into code-neglecting their new position, a new cto focusing on engineering tasks rather than leading or processes, or a motivated engineer starting a business yet ends up not able to get out of the engineering thought process and never releasing the product. It's hard but you gotta step back. Once in awhile and ask, are you doing what you need to at this moment to reach the goal?

  • @user-kh7kx9en9l
    @user-kh7kx9en9l Před 4 měsíci +31

    This is some serious wisdom...as someone that's spent 8 months working on my own project now.

  • @neanda
    @neanda Před 3 měsíci +4

    you playing guitar as the outro is such a cool touch, it's like a soundtrack to reading the comments :)

  • @ByronBennett
    @ByronBennett Před 4 měsíci +8

    Thanks, dude! I'm 54, working corporate, building my app on the side. Been working on it for a couple of years. It's not a simple product, so...strike 2! (Strike 1, I'm 54). Really appreciate your encouragement.

  • @michaelharings9913
    @michaelharings9913 Před 4 měsíci +44

    MVP : minimum viable product!

    • @mike.1
      @mike.1 Před 4 měsíci +2

      Most value player

  • @rommellagera8543
    @rommellagera8543 Před 4 měsíci +49

    There are only 2 skills you need to be able to survive as a freelance or startup software company
    1. Top skill is not coding, but abiility to collect payment
    2. See number 1 😅

    • @ArneBab
      @ArneBab Před 4 měsíci +2

      that’s to "survive", right? Not live, but bare survival.

    • @rommellagera8543
      @rommellagera8543 Před 4 měsíci

      @@ArneBab Your knowledge of dependency injection or event driven architecture will not matter if you cannot collect from your client. But you don't need to trust a random person in the internet, try it and tell me how you did otherwise.

    • @ArneBab
      @ArneBab Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@rommellagera8543 I did not contradict that. I said that this is bare survival, not living. It is the condition to survive, but not to enjoy what you do.
      You obviously won’t enjoy it, if your work does not make ends meet, so if you fail collecting, you won’t be happy for long, but if you only manage to collect, then you risk running into burnout again soon.
      Did you have "survive" in your post from the start and I misread that? If yes: I’m sorry! I read "to live as startup" so if you had "survive" in this from the start, I commented on my own mind, not on you …

    • @rommellagera8543
      @rommellagera8543 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@ArneBab it is a precursor to enjoy what you do. Unless you have experience having less than $50 for a week or two because you cannot collect, you will never understand. Nothing to enjoy in that situation.

    • @ArneBab
      @ArneBab Před 4 měsíci

      @@rommellagera8543 I remember losing 50€ every month when I didn’t make enough during the PhD for the family - that was already bad …

  • @MaxShapira2real
    @MaxShapira2real Před 4 měsíci +2

    Super useful! Thank you, Jayme. You nailed it!👍

  • @tonylangworthy5479
    @tonylangworthy5479 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Wow, this hit me right in the heart! I’m so guilty of over engineering and rewriting a certain project over and over. Great for learning, but it’s horrible for business. Thanks for making this. Instant subscriber here!

  • @KineticCode
    @KineticCode Před 4 měsíci +14

    this week's groove was especially groovy

    • @HealthyDev
      @HealthyDev  Před 4 měsíci +4

      It’s actually the intro to a song from my band in high school. Wrote that one in 1993!

  • @RyanSimon
    @RyanSimon Před 4 měsíci +11

    Some really fantastic advice here! Just launched an early version of my product to customers for testing and its taken me 2 years to get here. I can relate to everything you've said.

  • @ward_jl
    @ward_jl Před 4 měsíci +2

    Such valuable insights. Have to save this to watch it a few times over

  • @Geohhh
    @Geohhh Před 4 měsíci +3

    I'm amazed and thankfull for you. You videos helped me as a software developper in the past and it still is with your latest ones... Always sound advices and always on point (at least for me). Your not only delivering "content" here, definetely not. Meaningfull talks. Thank you.

    • @HealthyDev
      @HealthyDev  Před 4 měsíci +1

      Thank you so much for your support. It means more than you know.

  • @cheesetoochalk
    @cheesetoochalk Před 4 měsíci +1

    This was a really valuable video. Wow. I can feel the sincerity in the message too.

  • @jaymanx4life
    @jaymanx4life Před 4 měsíci +3

    Thank you for all the good tips. I've just finished the paperwork I need to get my sole proprietary business registered last week, and I'm encouraged to keep going. No product in mind yet but I want to hone in on my business strategy first.

    • @dmitripogosian5084
      @dmitripogosian5084 Před 2 měsíci

      Business strategy depends on what your are planning to sell.

  • @spectr__
    @spectr__ Před 4 měsíci +9

    Thank you for this, I'm just starting to plan something

  • @literallyshane4306
    @literallyshane4306 Před 4 měsíci

    Great advice; well delivered. thanks mate

  • @MattMcT
    @MattMcT Před 4 měsíci +1

    Great work dude. Thank you

  • @itaiee
    @itaiee Před 3 měsíci +1

    Great points, well balanced between positivity and realism

  • @JackalFPV
    @JackalFPV Před 4 měsíci +1

    Very valuable information for a programmer that wants to start a business. Thank you!

  • @matten_zero
    @matten_zero Před 4 měsíci +2

    Needed this. In this environment as a self taught AI Engineer it's the only way for me to break through the noise. I really don't want to go the whole LEET code grind set. This is a much more sustainable and fun way to prove my skills and make money at the same time

  • @kodekorp2064
    @kodekorp2064 Před 4 měsíci +23

    That advice in the beginning of the video… I swear is one of the most basic advices I’ve heard over and over growing up as a kid.
    You cater your product to customers, yes you definitely listen to feedback.

    • @mike.1
      @mike.1 Před 4 měsíci

      Good luck when customers tell you opposite things

    • @kodekorp2064
      @kodekorp2064 Před 4 měsíci

      @@mike.1 Like the budlight fiasco?

    • @MrC0MPUT3R
      @MrC0MPUT3R Před 4 měsíci

      @@mike.1 In my experience, customers never know what they want, but they sure as hell know what they don't want. If you get conflicting feedback there's almost always something deeper going on. Maybe one customer wants a completely different product or feature than the one you're trying to build.

  • @colbr6733
    @colbr6733 Před 4 měsíci

    Great advice, particularly for those of us actually on this path.

  • @piotrz6872
    @piotrz6872 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I like your content more and more.
    It's honest, thought through and what's more important to me, it's based.
    There's a lot to be said about the daily struggles coder parents have and this one fits really nice - Landing in my favourites ;)
    Keep up the good work 👍
    Btw. I do like the guitar breaks you give, they somehow make your content even more pleasant.

    • @HealthyDev
      @HealthyDev  Před 4 měsíci +1

      Thanks for all the kind words and the feedback!

  • @dakalodk
    @dakalodk Před 4 měsíci +2

    great video . very practical tips

  • @rolandfisher
    @rolandfisher Před 4 měsíci +4

    It's about as shocking as an MBA trying to build great software and failing. It's almost as if these two skill sets are different from each other or something.

    • @HealthyDev
      @HealthyDev  Před 4 měsíci

      Ha! You may be onto something there ;). Definitely two skillsets that can be learned by one person. It's a matter of just putting the time in.

  • @absurd0000
    @absurd0000 Před 4 měsíci +4

    Keep up the great work! I love your videos

  • @mayurdotca
    @mayurdotca Před 4 měsíci

    As a Non-Tech Co-Founder, Fractional Product Consultant, and a VC Fund GP, I truly appreciate this video. I have worked across the desk from Engineering (and was one early in my career) my entire career. Please do more of these videos. If you want some input, happy to chat as well.

  • @jochemcode4570
    @jochemcode4570 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Thank you ❤ need every bit of info before i walk into this world

  • @arinchang6579
    @arinchang6579 Před 4 měsíci

    Great video on the truths behind starting a business.

  • @Orkari
    @Orkari Před 4 měsíci +9

    Thank you for making this video! Very few people are discussing solo software development entrepreneurship. Please keep this discussion going! ❤

  • @will-smith-nh
    @will-smith-nh Před 2 měsíci +1

    Fantastic video.
    Thank you so much.

  • @user-oc5gz6wh1r
    @user-oc5gz6wh1r Před 2 měsíci +1

    The best advice I got when I was bitching about a client changing everything after 2 weeks of work: The client is allowed to be in error. Helped me tremendously in my client relationships

  • @wtatari
    @wtatari Před 4 měsíci

    Thank you so much, I'm working a Form creation App, and I really needed to hear that.
    PS: love the music

  • @andrewradulescu
    @andrewradulescu Před 4 měsíci

    I started my own tech business (services) 4y ago. I still learn how to evolve as an entrepreneur. I don’t know who you are, is the first time I watch your videos but the content is the real deal. Keep up and good luck to all of you out there! 🎉

  • @PawlTV
    @PawlTV Před 4 měsíci +1

    Dude, just found your channel and I'm truly lovin' it. Greetz from Germany!

  • @dougsaylor6442
    @dougsaylor6442 Před 4 měsíci +1

    This was really helpful! Thanks!

  • @tuffgniuz
    @tuffgniuz Před 4 měsíci +1

    Great video. I have seriously started working on my SaaS product for the past month. I started working on this because I am currently on sick leave due to burnout and depression. This project has helped me get back into a routine. I think the easy part so far is to figure out how to build the product, so I try to balance it out with days to work on parts I have more problems with such as learning on how to market my product, finding the correct audience and also building a good landings page. What also has helped me is to set a timeline and write down the main objective and set small goals to get to that main objective.

    • @HealthyDev
      @HealthyDev  Před 4 měsíci

      You're ahead of many folks that haven't realized that yet. It's messy but sounds like you've got your priorities straight. I LOVE building product - it's what I did for a living for 20 years! I find I love the other stuff too, but only when I've fallen over a few times sucking at it, and then start to see how to do it right. Hang in there!

  • @forlooplogic
    @forlooplogic Před 2 měsíci +1

    I recently just found your channel. I love your content. I think you make some very valid points about starting something on your own. New subscriber here. Looking forward to more content.

  • @Tymonello
    @Tymonello Před 3 měsíci +1

    I love your approach to this topic, very realistic, down to earth and practical.

  • @HaseebHeaven
    @HaseebHeaven Před 4 měsíci

    Great video greatly explained everything really needed this thanks.

  • @conzone
    @conzone Před 4 měsíci +1

    Pure gold!

  • @ArneBab
    @ArneBab Před 4 měsíci +8

    The difference between viral and turning up a profit from the start is kind of what Aral Balkan described as "build a stay up instead of a start up".

  • @Andrew-rc3vh
    @Andrew-rc3vh Před 4 měsíci +2

    It's a good tip at ~15m regarding spending time on the business. I ran a technical business and had my nose in a load of electronics, but on regular occasions you have to look at the real numbers on your sales, income, investment, what you need to do to work on the next expansion idea and so on. You have to think that building a business is always a case of constant improvement, better ways of doing things so it all runs faster. You are essentially investing time to save you time and improving quality to the customer.

    • @HealthyDev
      @HealthyDev  Před 4 měsíci

      Thanks for sharing a real testimonial!

  • @nunofigueira8691
    @nunofigueira8691 Před 4 měsíci

    I love this video. You talk about the issues we are failing to make things happen😊

    • @bakytbeksaktanov9086
      @bakytbeksaktanov9086 Před 4 měsíci

      Yepp. I wish I knew this things before. This are the exact mistakes I had to go through. Thanks to author by the way!

  • @Langeta-kun
    @Langeta-kun Před 4 měsíci +3

    Being in so many coding communities, and seeing the owners reply to feedback basically saying no youre wrong in a friendly manner. Like okay man, keep making a product only you like I guess

    • @HealthyDev
      @HealthyDev  Před 4 měsíci +1

      Humility is kind of rare in engineers. I have some theories on that I'll expand on in a future episode...

  • @AllenThomasVarghese
    @AllenThomasVarghese Před 4 měsíci

    Thanks for stressing how to stay sane in the sea of advice out there in the ether!

  • @kotk05
    @kotk05 Před 4 měsíci

    Big Bro, fascinating video as usual. It's been over 10 years and I still don't have a start up idea I'm interested in.

  • @Anne-kz4fi
    @Anne-kz4fi Před 3 měsíci +1

    Great video. I am currently making 90% of the mistakes you mentioned. I've been working on the software side for about a year now, started working on the business side just recently. Self-doubt is a huge problem, it leads to me just finding problems with the software, tweaking it every day, adding new features, etc. And all that could've been done much later after the deployment. Guess I'll just deploy it within two weeks to test the market and only then add new features or fix issues.

  • @uservstabicudiu2023
    @uservstabicudiu2023 Před 3 měsíci

    Great video! Thanks for sharing ;-) I started to learn coding about 5 months ago with no CS background, as I am planning to build a blockchain project by myself (I do have start-up founder background). Have to say I do feel quite intimated about the tech part since I am not the expert. Recently I was told by my friend that one similar blockchain project (part of the business model are similar to my business idea) failed, though most of the reasons are actually commercial parts, especially marketing, approach customers etc. which exactly same as you suggested in the video. Which really makes me think a lot, because as a "hot" technology, I always thought that blockchain-based project would be easier to get funds and attention, actually, in the end, it still back to the fundament of business: "Business" itself instead of the "hot" technology.

  • @lcamilo15
    @lcamilo15 Před 4 měsíci

    Love this, I’m actually starting a software in Colombia.

  • @MrRyanlintag
    @MrRyanlintag Před 4 měsíci

    Thank you for your advice. I am in this current situation now where I have a job and trying to do side projects.

  • @marwentrabelsi2983
    @marwentrabelsi2983 Před 4 měsíci +1

    just subed, very inspiring, will apply this for my saas and future ones!

    • @HealthyDev
      @HealthyDev  Před 4 měsíci +1

      Welcome to the channel! Happy to have you here. 🙏

  • @emirbalic8800
    @emirbalic8800 Před měsícem +1

    You're cool. Good video, thanks :) By the way, I love the color of your Gretsch.

  • @seraphcms2511
    @seraphcms2511 Před 4 měsíci +9

    This is a fantastic video ..... what's so interesting is that it's by a serious Software Engineer and not by some get-rich-quick pseudo guru!
    For me it is perfect as my last day as a back-end (Go) software enginner was on 1st Jan 2024 and I'm now building out a "start-up", but I'm cheating:-
    1) I have had the idea for ages and absolutely know that there is a need (the big question is, Is the need urgent enough?)
    2) I have had a side-hustle a few years ago as a semi-pro photographer so I am tax registered and have an accounting system etc already
    These experiences completely reflect everything brought up in the video.
    The area where I have almost certainly gone wrong is in over-engineering .... I have built an incredibly complex system to solve an incredibly broad and complex problem!
    One thing I haven't done is built an MVP as several people have commented (The 'V' bit is the tricky one) .. I really would suggest reading Eric Ries' book "The Lean Startup".

    • @HealthyDev
      @HealthyDev  Před 4 měsíci

      That’s one of my favorite books!

    • @seraphcms2511
      @seraphcms2511 Před 4 měsíci

      @@HealthyDev I was hearing so much about MVPs, I thought I would actually find out what the actual rationale was. He was solving a very tricky problem!

  • @asmithgames5926
    @asmithgames5926 Před 3 měsíci

    This is great advise!

  • @LukeDupin
    @LukeDupin Před 4 měsíci

    Solid honest list

  • @ryanjosephlock
    @ryanjosephlock Před 4 měsíci

    I was a marketing manager who had an idea for a product that can help loyalty platforms grow. Have learnt coding and given myself 2 years to launch a product. Loving the journey!

  • @neanda
    @neanda Před 3 měsíci

    seriously bro, you and your guitar are proper good, can you please do an hour or so of it as it really just helped me focus on my work. you should do focus music, and link it on the next vid :)

  • @carlosirias4474
    @carlosirias4474 Před 4 měsíci +2

    I'm really enjoying this recent content. Regards.

    • @HealthyDev
      @HealthyDev  Před 4 měsíci +1

      Thanks for your support 🙏

  • @RostKaniuchenko
    @RostKaniuchenko Před 4 měsíci +5

    Video is actually very useful for understanding the company's perspective on things.

  • @method341
    @method341 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Really digging the guitar on the side. No one does that!

    • @HealthyDev
      @HealthyDev  Před 4 měsíci

      It's kind of my thing, just started it a little over a year ago. People either love it, or hate it ;)

  • @DezZolation
    @DezZolation Před 4 měsíci +4

    I'm a CS major -> engineer -> solution architect -> head of product at a growing startup. I hope I'm not being too overly confident when I think that I know what it takes to go beyond engineering and talk to customers. Nowadays I barely code "professionally" in favor of all these other startup management tasks. Except, that I have my own ideas and product I'm working on during the evenings/weekends (inter-business project management app - sounds boring right? 😉). I know that if I want to succeed I would need to focus on it full-time. But until I have my MVP and actively make the decision to focus on the business aspect, I am okay knowing what it takes later down the line. For now I'm good building a massive network and getting more startup experience.

    • @HealthyDev
      @HealthyDev  Před 4 měsíci +1

      Sounds like you’re approaching it pretty reasonably!

  • @mohitgupta3971
    @mohitgupta3971 Před 4 měsíci

    Starting small business without any revenue in sight is the worst possible mistake in general. This video is Gold.

  • @gabrielwolfcolor
    @gabrielwolfcolor Před 4 měsíci +1

    Well said. Beautifully played. Thank you very much 🙏 I’m finally building something I wanted to do for many years. May I send you a link once I go in beta?

    • @HealthyDev
      @HealthyDev  Před 4 měsíci +1

      I wish it weren't the case, but I probably won't have time to check it out. Of course feel free to send it. I get requests for this all the time and I do look sometimes. Just being honest it's tough for me to find the time. Either way, wish you the best with your efforts!

  • @bobbysbits2575
    @bobbysbits2575 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Wow. What a great feature. I feel like the ADA Saved metric could be used programmatically in a "Public Good" smart contract with Catalyst for vested funding

  • @RememberingGames
    @RememberingGames Před 4 měsíci +1

    I love it. This is a very balanced take. No bullshit, just facts.

    • @HealthyDev
      @HealthyDev  Před 4 měsíci +1

      Glad you enjoyed it! Thanks.

  • @phisyka
    @phisyka Před 4 měsíci +3

    Amazing video. My goal is to bootstrap my own company and you touched on many of the things that I'm scared of about myself. I just got a job at a big tech company and stashing up enough savings to be lean FI, and then going for it. What are your favorite resources for learning about starting a small software company (1-10 employees) that creates software products?

    • @HealthyDev
      @HealthyDev  Před 4 měsíci

      I've read and tried so many things over the years, I'm not sure where to begin. The book "The Art of the Start" by Guy Kawasaki is a favorite. There are too many to list, but I definitely got value out of that one.

  • @kfletcher2005
    @kfletcher2005 Před 4 měsíci

    Good discussion on the realistic expectations of going solo. You are right, execution of any idea is the key. Poor execution of a good idea is a failed project no matter how you slice it. For me the biggest barrier to entry is competing against an army of developers. Maybe its possible with all the AI tools available, but I've found some of these AI tools will hallucinate, and generate code that looks like it will work, but in practice doesn't.

  • @LegionLeague
    @LegionLeague Před 4 měsíci +1

    I'm in the process of creating a SAAS that scrapes marketplaces at user defined intervals and products. I know there's definitely demand for this service in my country and there are some services already doing this.
    I did see myself in some of the points that you made, specifically the overengineering and spending too much time building the software and not the business (I'm actually intimidated to put it out there, what if no one wants to use it?). And I'm nowhere near building any networks. So #8 is here as well (the lack of self confidence).
    So it was like you were talking about me half the time. Scrary stuff.

  • @StephanYazvinski
    @StephanYazvinski Před 4 měsíci +1

    This video is gold, i’ve been reading a ton of SaaS and business books, maybe 4-5 in the last month. This video is a perfect summary of all of the most important stuff. Amazing job!!

  • @Centauriel
    @Centauriel Před 4 měsíci

    Dayum, it hurts. But you are spot on.

  • @tanglesites
    @tanglesites Před 4 měsíci +5

    I think every good project in production started out in producton as a Minimal Viable Product. I know any real project, even the ones I create as side projects, I at least pretend it is a real product and start with a BRD and a SRD. It really opens up the domain and reveals things abou the project I didn't think about initially. The last two points are probably spoke to me the most. I am the only Developer I know, and I have been learning and doing this for at least 5 years. Through my BS and now in my MS, it is hard to build a network either due to faults of my own or circumstance. Due to the fact I don't know any other developers, that lack of experience leaves me in a silent wake, where I don't know how good or bad I am doing. Which leaves me wondering.

    • @SufianBabri
      @SufianBabri Před 4 měsíci

      Had a similar situation myself. I read Uncle Bob's Clean Code and learnt about UX (took a free Google course which helped me as a mobile app dev. I still read interesting UI/UX topics because it interests me.
      So find your interest (Ui/UX, code architecture, clean coding, deeper knowledge of a framework, etc) and follow it. But it is also important to learn more about the tools you're using (e.g. git, GitHub). There's more to git than most people do (rebase vs merge, rewriting commit history to clean up those "WIP" commits to something that will help you later on, deleting branches and keeping your repo clean, code deletion over commenting it out).

  • @nobleartist1
    @nobleartist1 Před 2 měsíci

    Im starting a web design and digital marketing agency. Im a dad with two kids and have a fulltime web dev job and its challenging but this video was very insightful

  • @Erik_The_Viking
    @Erik_The_Viking Před 4 měsíci +1

    Excellent video. The skills you use for writing code aren't the same as those for running a business. This should be viewed by those who are considering their own business after getting laid off. Doing this as a side gig works as it's lower risk - if it does well enough to make enough money then great.

  • @setitthen
    @setitthen Před 4 měsíci

    Programming as a electrical engineer. With out any real software experience appart from attempting C C++ assembly, basic, assembly programming very little . Just putting a program together and suck it and see. I look back at some of the programmes i had written. And its nice to see somthing evolve from nothing. I have almost given up on many occasions. Putting a product together is daunting...imposter syndrome especially when your up againts all the different tools chains and terminology. I think business is like getting a car for the first time you are so apprehensive and its like looking up at a giant. You are now in control of something that has many complexities and you become the imposter. I keep telling my self if you dont learn you dont earn. It drives me forward.

  • @JavaScriptRoom
    @JavaScriptRoom Před 4 měsíci +4

    As an engineer and a saas founder, I can totally relate to all points. Great overview of potential pitfals for all devs starting a business.

  • @LeonCouch
    @LeonCouch Před 2 měsíci

    Im in a completely different field: music performance. I can say much of your advice is applicable to any field: 1. You have boss, if in a company or the market is your "boss", 2. you may love your field but it's not a hobby--you need to make money, 3. You may work alone a lot (in my case, practicing my keyboard and learning more music) but you find opportunity through interacting with people and also find new, marketable directions for your own growth, etc.

  • @khileshjairamdas8410
    @khileshjairamdas8410 Před 4 měsíci

    Those are some pretty chords to listen to between jobs

  • @franklee663
    @franklee663 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Well, maybe I can share my story here, I was working as client technical service back in the 90's and I can code. Some customers asked me for favours to integrate the software I am selling to some other software, so I happily did for them. However, as I was doing so, the clients wanted more and more functionality. So I thought, why not I set up a company, I asked a good friend to set up a company and I enhanced my software to do all the functions expected and changed the interface and all that and let my company sell to the clients instead. That's how my company began and eventually sold the company off with a big prize money

    • @HealthyDev
      @HealthyDev  Před 4 měsíci

      Thanks for sharing! Companies need to realize this about developers. You mistreat them or stop giving them opportunities, you could just be letting go of your new competition!

  • @gkiokan
    @gkiokan Před 4 měsíci

    You are right in so many arguments. But we also need customers who are willing to pay you the price that is worth to work with. Paying me based on a hourly rate is kinda killing myself because I do have the experience to finish the Job in the half of the expected time, so I am charging a specific price for my work which is still legit. Sure it may be expensive at the first look but I do it with a matured stack, probably without the need of debugging or having bugs after the Release. The customer also pays you having the experience over the years and that the product that he gets helps him to be more efficient or solves some use-cases.

  • @hourglass8450
    @hourglass8450 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Dude goes into guitar mode partway hahaha nice one man

  • @ViA743
    @ViA743 Před 4 měsíci

    I’ve tried several ideas of the ground and every time unintentionally run into similar situations, like overengineering, not focused enough on business itself, and now subconsciously I destroyed self confidence from falling multiple times. Now took a year just to distance myself and thinking about restarting the journey. But for some reason, now I’m between choices, trying to restart the old idea, since there is so much done already for it, or work on a new idea and build the foundation that previous ideas already have …

  • @antisnufff
    @antisnufff Před 4 měsíci +3

    Love this Video. Super Thanls, i'm trying to build Sign Request application with government certification.

    • @HealthyDev
      @HealthyDev  Před 4 měsíci

      Sounds like it could be really useful!

  • @MrDYou
    @MrDYou Před 4 měsíci

    so many gems! For anyone reading this, treating your business and yourself seriously, you will succeed. In the past when I built side-project, I was half expecting it will fail, so I put in half effort. When it got difficult, I just gave up. Because in that way, I didn't have to face failure and no embarrassment. But also, nothing will happen. I am forcing myself to face failure now, force myself to talk to stranger(customers), experiment fast, be somewhere your competitor is not. Be like water, my friends

  • @Garycarlyle
    @Garycarlyle Před 4 měsíci

    Good point. The advantage I had when I did my tech start up is I already had experience of running nightclubs with dozens of staff. That taught me a lot about business as really a company is a company of people in like the medieval sense so to speak. Just a group of people with a common goal.

  • @shadyworld1
    @shadyworld1 Před 4 měsíci

    Advice, pick a Product Manager you like and get along and most importantly you trust each other to partner with so you both have a better chance to get to your sweet spot!
    They can handle business pretty well alongside you for small products and early stage when you’re taking this path.

  • @TheCritic8210
    @TheCritic8210 Před 4 měsíci

    I'm definitely on this boat about to start my journey! What type of guitar is that? I really enjoy those interludes.

    • @HealthyDev
      @HealthyDev  Před 4 měsíci

      Hey, thank you. It's a Gretsch Electromatic.

  • @inspacesilence
    @inspacesilence Před 4 měsíci

    amazing !!

  • @Aeric80
    @Aeric80 Před 4 měsíci +3

    I agree with most of your points. I quit my job almost 3 years ago and decided to build my version of Point of Sales system. It is a very difficult journey as I have to do it solo. No one else around me understand the pain. I used up all my savings for my commitments such as paying the bank loans, insurance and credit card. I also need to allocate some budget for the product R&D and equipment. Fortunately, I get a freelance job that can give me a little bit of income. I am not giving up and I hope other people like me also be strong.

  • @leifelliott1500
    @leifelliott1500 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Thanks for the video. I'm a rust developer and Ive noticed a severe lack of quality language and ecosystem education (and the quality content I find is in book form almost exclusively). Im hoping to build a Rust language community with something like the Skool platform. Any tips? (seeing as you have built an education brand).

    • @HealthyDev
      @HealthyDev  Před 4 měsíci +1

      Well I wouldn’t consider myself an expert on the education space so I’d defer to what you think is best. I had to build my own course plugin for my website because my first course is pretty custom and involves a lot of stuff no other course platform could offer.

  • @danielthompson2561
    @danielthompson2561 Před 4 měsíci

    I handed in notice at my Data Consultancy job a couple weeks ago - finish Thursday next week.
    Im going into independent contracting in the same sector I’ve been working at for the last couple years as I build a Data Discovery, Data Quality and Data Migration tool - essentially allowing someone with a bit of data knowledge to tackle an old legacy system that might be mostly unknown, build quality rules and migrate the data to a defined structure.

    • @danielthompson2561
      @danielthompson2561 Před 4 měsíci

      Just to add to this - fairly confident on the general features at this stage. Hoping to take this advice on board - especially the risk of over-engineering.

  • @tomich20
    @tomich20 Před 4 měsíci +1

    15 years being a solo developer and i still make the 9 mistakes you mention 😂😂😢
    Thanks a lot, this video is gold. Subscribing ❤

  • @rirajojo
    @rirajojo Před 4 měsíci

    I have written software in my spare time I could sell, but getting to that point is still a big step.

  • @CaleMcCollough
    @CaleMcCollough Před 4 měsíci +1

    This is great advice. I've been running software startups for years. This is #RealTalk.

  • @BenjaminOwenSlattery
    @BenjaminOwenSlattery Před 4 měsíci

    Yeah I definitely have the low self confidence issue, even though the product has already been life changing for me since I was in my target market