I have been going for over a year because I simply love what I am building. DoerHub is designed to help people do more together - to enable serendipity and power meaningful projects <a href="http://www.doerhub.com" rel="nofollow">http://www.doerhub.com</a> and <a href="http://www.doerhub.com/for/doerhub" rel="nofollow">http://www.doerhub.com/for/doerhub</a> .<p>I've had more ups and downs than I can count - several potential cofounders who didn't work out, moving solo to the Bay area, trying to survive school in parallel because it is tremendously helpful to the business, etc.<p>At the end of the day, I see this as a my masterpiece - every peace of it is built with love and I am testing the impact of each new component as I go to make sure I'm heading in the right direction. I start a new piece of functionality every day and don't go to bed until it's done. When I hit a wall with coding, I do biz dev or something else. Resting from one to do the other. I catch myself thinking about DoerHub even when I am supposed to rest - and solving problems in my head during the most mundane everyday tasks. I have a long roadmap and the peaces are falling like dominos when I focus (first release, boosting conversion on homepage, boosting internal engagement, adding a viral feature, seeing numbers go up or applying scenario B when they don't, boosting performance, adding another needed component, etc). It feels like a long game I am conquering one level at a time.<p>I have met many smart people who had the skills to help, but at the end of the day, it comes down to persistence and commitment - your ability to bite down on something and not let go. So many talented people are stuck doing things just to get by, to get a bigger pay check, to get rich. Unless you love what you are doing, the people who are using your work will not feel the love in it either so it becomes a doomed endeavour. That is why I push forward relentlessly, even as a solo founder, I love what I am doing and the users can see that.<p>I need a co-founder and when someone comes along who wants to join me and has the skills I simply ask that they build one of the next pieces on the roadmap independently. You can't be a co-founder unless you are capable of carrying a piece of the business forward on your own. If they take too long or give up midway, we've saved each other a lot of time and can remain friends. In the mean time, I just keep on trucking. Crafting DoerHub with love and watching users benefit from my work daily. I will be doing this for years to come, and somewhere along the way I will find someone who wants to do it with me and is just as stubborn. Probably one of DoerHub's users (which is why I only promote the site within groups of amazing doers).