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Ask HN: How to get an income while working towards an MVP, as solo-entrepreneur?

3 点作者 tyrbentsen超过 4 年前
As a solo developer, I have been working on a simulation tool for embedded systems for the past couple of months. Since it is a considerable technical challenge, there is still some work to do to get to a stage where the tool is practically usable by customers. So that means that it would be hard to sell it at this moment. Moreover, since I&#x27;m working solo, improving the website, writing articles, going to customers, or other sales-related activities, means taking away time from working on the tool itself. Similarly, I could spent my time doing services to have some income, but then the progress on my product would slow down a lot as well.<p>What is a good approach to having some income, with a product that is not yet an MVP, and still be able to continue programming to get to an MVP?

2 条评论

brudgers超过 4 年前
If they are not paying you, they are not customers. If a proposed project might solve an important problem, potential customers will speculatively pay for its development...it&#x27;s an investment in the same way as paying for an in-house development attempt.<p>Moreover, they won&#x27;t care about your website or blog posts. They will care about trying to solve their problem.<p>&quot;But what if they don&#x27;t want to pay until it is built?&quot;<p>Two things. First they don&#x27;t trust you. Second they don&#x27;t want to pay. If you build an MVP, that doesn&#x27;t mean they will trust you. And it does not mean they will want to pay you.<p>Asking for money is the best way to validate your idea. It is possible that an MVP will make all the difference. But often it won&#x27;t because people are polite and they are paid to talk to people like you as part of their job because sometimes moonshots pay off.<p>The core problem is that you are undercapitalized. This is not just your problem. It is a problem for any business that invests in your technology. And the primary investment is not money but time and energy to incorporate it into their processes. Broke (financially) doesn&#x27;t sell. Good luck.
keyle超过 4 年前
Well that&#x27;s a catch 22, chicken and egg problem.<p>Few things that come to mind... Obviously have some cash aside for this type of &quot;sabbatical&quot;.<p>Another possibility is to get someone you used to work for &quot;invest&quot; in the idea, as a sponsorship of some kind, in which they have some skin in. This can work because presumably you&#x27;re solving a problem related to your career path.<p>Another option is some seed investment from an accelerator of some kind, but your chances are really low unless you promise them a unicorn shitting gold on a platter.<p>Finally, family can help for this sort of thing, but again they have to understand that it&#x27;s throwing money down the pit 90% of the time.<p>You can also try to take on a part-time contract to sustain yourself while helping out someone else. Like a 3 day week affair, where you work the remaining 3 days on your project and take a day off. Worst case is take a mind-numbing job which doesn&#x27;t get you tired mentally, and focus your mental efforts at night on your side projects.<p>Another final idea that pops to mind is the Patreons and gofundme type options... They can work if you&#x27;re pretty on video and can sell your idea to the common people. Most of us are too shy to even fathom doing this... I would have impostor syndrome personally, then there is the constant answering to people pain...<p>A lot of us are in this boat, so don&#x27;t feel like you&#x27;re in it alone or crazy doing so. The reality I suspect is 90% of us go back to work to fund their night&#x2F;garage project; until we can finally live in a utopia where humanity could actually focus on advancing itself rather than spinning a wheel in a cage.