TE
TechEcho
Home24h TopNewestBestAskShowJobs
GitHubTwitter
Home

TechEcho

A tech news platform built with Next.js, providing global tech news and discussions.

GitHubTwitter

Home

HomeNewestBestAskShowJobs

Resources

HackerNews APIOriginal HackerNewsNext.js

© 2025 TechEcho. All rights reserved.

The single founder dilemma

10 pointsby alexshyealmost 12 years ago

4 comments

gmaysalmost 12 years ago
I’ve developed an affinity for single founders because I am one. I&#x27;m working on my first product now and I don&#x27;t have any experience working with a cofounder (or even in the tech space), but knowing how I am and how I work, so I prefer to primarily working alone until can&#x27;t (i.e. when I need full-time support). So far, I&#x27;ve only outsourced a few minor development tasks to start building relationships with developers I’d want to work with down the road.<p>I&#x27;ve been working on this for about 1.5yrs part time, put $15,000 into it so far (mostly infrastructure), and it&#x27;s finally releasable. Though I haven&#x27;t started marketing yet, I&#x27;ve put in to leave my current career in two months and do this full-time. I’m prepared for it to take a few years to get going, but that’s OK. Thankfully, due to past investments and zero debt I&#x27;ll even be able to continue contributing to savings even if my revenue is $0, which essentially means I could do this indefinitely. I should also mention that my recurring costs including CA LLC tax and all services are under $300&#x2F;mo., which contributes to my sustainability. I’ve found that single founders with a bit of patience can significantly minimize costs without sacrificing quality; we want to be smart, not cheap. My infrastructure costs scale with my users and I don’t have a free trial or free plan (B2B), so cost increases here are a non-issue.<p>I took a month of leave recently to get a feel for how working alone full-time on this project would be. It was awesome because all of my habits were magnified. My wife was out of town for this month (she travels a lot) so it was just me. I found myself working on the project all day, every day except to go to the gym twice a day, pick up groceries, or go to Costco for a $3.76 pizza and hot dog lunch every once in a while. While working out I&#x27;d either listen to Mixergy and similar startup podcasts or read business books if I was on the bike. I loved it. It was ultra-productive, but also sustainable, not some unhealthy sprint.<p>Over the past year I&#x27;ve been considering the advice of validating assumptions with customers and getting traction before pursuing it full-time, but I&#x27;ve decided to mostly ignore that advice. Additionally, I&#x27;ve only asked for feedback on the design of the sales site, not on how the product works. I have a clear vision of the company I want to build, how I want the product to work, and what my customers actually need (I&#x27;m familiar with the market). I&#x27;ve had difficulty explaining the idea because there isn&#x27;t anything similar enough to compare it to, but I’m getting better at relating it to existing solutions that it combines. I look forward to working with paying customers in the next few months and further improving based on their recommendations.<p>If I had a cofounder, I doubt my vision could be as pure as it is. I&#x27;m building the company I want, how I want, and a product I believe needs to exist, something I see as the future of this market and I’ve decided to go all in. It’s weird because I read how often startups fail, how difficult it is, and how being a single founder makes it even more difficult. For some reason, I feel like this isn’t risky, but maybe it’s because I’ve built it that way. As long as I put time into the right things, I know it will work out. I have pangs of doubt from time to time, but that’s all they are. I feel a bit silly because I’ve never worked in tech (military background), this is my first startup, and I think I should feel more worried than I am, but whatever. I love it and I love being a single founder. It&#x27;ll be interesting to see whether or not I pick up a cofounder down the road once I get traction and become much busier.
评论 #5841454 未加载
infogaufirealmost 12 years ago
I have been a single founder 2 times (one of the companies got sold and other one is doing good) and 2 times with co-founders. And I personally find starting up a single founder.<p>You mentioned you have good ideas more than 2 times i guess, you will have to take that thing out of your mind. When you are onto something, burn rest of the ideas for atleast 6 months.<p>If you can't find co-founder, surround yourself with team members, start with hiring people remotely china,india,bangladesh.<p>Build prototype, no full fledged product. Try to fail fast if things doesn't pick after few months to save some time and fatigue. By prototype I mean, that one feature that separates you from others.<p>Learn to delegate work. As a programmer first, founder second - I used to micro manage things which gave me really bad time with my first startup. But as you start delegating work to your remote workers / employees, you will start feeling better.<p>I would advice you to build something with atleast some business model. Its tough to create instagrams or tumblrs of the world.<p>Hope this helps.
评论 #5836255 未加载
评论 #5836192 未加载
mswenalmost 12 years ago
I also am single founder with 3 products built. The 3 products share a technological base but address very different markets and somewhat different expressions of the underlying idea.<p>I haven't sought any funding, but I am often in a quandary whether to spend more of my long-term financial reserves and stay focused on building the business around the products, or seek short term income through consulting. Or, possibly get a full-time job and think of these three as pre-built side projects.<p>I have also thought that if I could find the right salesperson/business development person as a partner that would be ideal. But like you that takes time that feels highly unproductive.<p>No easy decisions when those first (B2B) sales take so long.
cardinealmost 12 years ago
Being a single founder is awesome. You have complete creative control, no concerns about later disagreements, a lot more equity, and you don&#x27;t have to go it alone because you can always hire your co-founder as an employee.