Hey HN,<p>I'm a software engineer by day, father to a newborn and burning with passion for my startup.<p>What advice can you give to help me manage all three?<p>Any recommendations for tools and services to automate typical early startup tasks would be greatly appreciated.<p>Thanks :)
When I was a kid, my dad started a business. He was very good at it, and the business was very successful. He was constantly working though. He would bring work home, it would cover the kitchen table. When he wasn’t working, he was absolutely exhausted. If he wasn’t working, he was sleeping. He was not only working for the business, but also running the business.<p>The amount of time that I spent with my dad dwindled to very little. Not to mention my siblings. I wish he’d spent more time with me. (It’s worth noting that he had other issues that contributed to our relationship).<p>I would treat your startup in this context as another newborn, but one from a different partner. It will require a substantial amount of time, money, and attention like your current newborn needs, but is under a different roof. Your co-parent of your newborn can’t necessarily also parent your other “newborn”, so you need another partner to step in.<p>Stepping away from the analogy for a moment, I (respectfully) doubt that your startup will be as important as your family. And as most any parent will tell you, the time with your baby will fly by and you will not believe how fast it goes. Prioritize your family over your work.
Realistically, the only one of the three people actually regret if they fail at is being a father - so I would honestly make sure you don't make excuses to sacrifice time on this.<p>Not saying you cant do the rest. Failing faster will be better than any productivity tips - it will reduce the period where your splitting between day-job & startup. As if the latter is successful you'll need to ditch the former pretty quickly.
The answer, is, do not.<p>The more you want to get balance, you'll get nothing.<p>Make a priority, what's more important then execute it. Take break, switch task then comeback with the loop.
hello,<p>idk, this might not be the most "popular" opinion ... especially here on HN, but imho.<p>keep the stable job and start to appreciate your family - especially your newborn child.<p>time flies, and you never get back the time you are missing out with your growing child - ever!!<p>and this is much more rewarding than getting some stupid startup off the ground - and be serious to yourself: statistically you won't have a lot of success anyhow ;))<p>just my 0.02€<p>v.
Don't.<p>You should choose your priorities.<p>Founding a startup is more than a full-time job.
Your current job is a full-time job.
I don't have experience with kids, but I heard they're quite some work.<p>In short: choose two out of three, and even then, expect to make some serious sacrifices.
I’m not convinced almost anyone does this successfully. The people founding startups are able to do so because they have a big enough safety net to obviate a need for full-time employment. Sometimes this is from savings or luck from a previous job, but anecdotally it most often stems from inheriting money from rich families.
Realistically the only way I was able to do it was being laid off which forced me to jump in. I had a savings and a wife who believed in me (the savings has helped her belief hah) Family is a no-compromise #1 priority for me under any and all circumstances. I don’t think it is possible for most people to do all three. At Berkeley we had a saying “you can have 2/3 of either: good grades, a social life, and sleep”. This feels like a similar 2/3. Unless your job is easy enough where you can get it done in 1-2 hours and spend the rest on your startup.
Here’s some suggestions from my recent experience:
- hire night nurse a few times a week to catch up on sleep
- hire nanny for day time
- SNOO Bassinet was a game changer with the baby sleeping 10+ hours
- wake up at 4:30am every day and work on startup BEFORE your day job. No one is awake to bother you. Pure focus.
I am in similar situation.
I don’t want to pile up extra work but if you want to chat up sometime on how things are, I am happy to chat. I’ve been looking for people in similar situation so it doesn’t feel like a crazy dream