Rasmus Myhrberg

Rasmus Myhrberg

Maker of Spark Plugin
21 points

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Ryan Wilson

5yr ago

How I quit my job and failed to start a business

This story starts three years ago. I was lucky to get a job as a software engineer straight out of college. I was joining a brand new team on a brand new product within the company. The product wasn't in the company's wheelhouse. The people on the team hadn't worked together very long, creating poor social dynamics. It wasn't fulfilling. I had stumbled upon Indiehackers and related content. I became a firm believer in bootstrapping and knew that's what I wanted to do. I knew general lessons to follow, but I hadn't internalized anything. I kept thinking to myself: "If I could quit my job and focus full-time on this side project, I would be successful and never have to work for someone else again." On November 8, 2019, I left my job. I thought I was quitting to start a business. In reality, I had become unemployed. I had grand ideas for this side project I had been working on. I now had the time to pursue those ideas. I thought to myself, "I need to build a few more features, and it will be ready to show to people and validate my idea." I was able to generate a small amount of traffic to the website. The responses I was getting were indifferent. I kept believing that people didn't understand the vision. I needed to build more features, and they would understand it. It made so much sense in my head. This thinking trapped me. Every time I met indifference as feedback, I would lose confidence. I'd think up what features were missing that would excite people. Excited to work on new ideas, I would bunker down and churn out a bunch of code. I'd get burned out. After a few days of recharging, I would try to get feedback. That feedback was almost always indifference. It's been seven months. I have shipped Polished, but it's nothing great. I let my ego drive my decision making. I thought I could build amazing features without doing the work of solving any real problems. I started to realize what I was doing wasn't practical after a conversation about it with a friend this past weekend. I have gotten a bit of interest from people about the concept, but the execution isn't there. I'm taking a break from Polished. I still have a few months of runway left. I'm going to reread and do my best to follow the lessons shared by others who have been successful at this. I'm going to talk to as many people as I can before diving in on an idea. I'm going to work in public and write about everything I do along the way. If you're interested in this new journey, follow me here on ProductHunt or on Twitter(https://twitter.com/rywils21)! Feel free to DM me about what you're working on, and I'll be sure to check it out and follow you back.

Usama Khalid

5yr ago

Here's the reason people not using your product 👇

More Features = More Complexity. More friction. Less user activation. More chances of failure. Much harder to get grip on UX. UX is like a puzzle. When you add more features. You get more pieces of puzzle. So more work. More complexity. Solution Get a top notch UX guy to fix it for you. Let me know if it's the case or DM me on Twitter that this isn't true. @im_usamakhalid Thank you.

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