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1071 points mtlynch | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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solutionyogi ◴[] No.39401643[source]
Michael,

You are an inspiration. I have been following your journey since your post about quitting Google hit the HN front page. And what a wild ride it has been.

You tried many projects (https://mtlynch.io/projects/), and it took a while for you to find your winning idea. And I have read each of your retrospectives on TinyPilot (https://mtlynch.io/retrospectives/) and know that it wasn't easy.

Your journey shows how hard it is to build a business (especially hardware-based), but with discipline and perseverance, it's definitely possible to create one as a solo founder.

I also have a business idea that I would like to work on, but I am not ready to quit my full-time job yet. I have a few questions for you:

1. Have you always been so disciplined in life? If not, how did you improve it? 2. As you shared here (https://mtlynch.io/solo-developer-year-1/), doubts are natural when you haven't succeeded yet; how did you keep going? Did you ever come close to giving up and going back to corporate America? 3. I believe you have a partner; how did this affect your relationship with your partner? 4. Knowing what you know now, what would you do differently?

If you are ever in NYC, please hit me up; I would love to buy you a drink and chat more in person.

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mtlynch ◴[] No.39403307[source]
Thanks for reading and for the kind words!

>Have you always been so disciplined in life? If not, how did you improve it?

No, I was a lot less disciplined when I was younger. I remember as a teen trying to learn Java several times and always getting bored a day or two in. I was a good student, but I would procrastinate work and distract myself while working.

I probably became more disciplined in my twenties, but I unfortunately don't think it was something I tried to do as much as it just happened.

One thing I think helped was protecting my focus more. I used to hop between different tasks a lot and constantly check social media or email if I had a moment of downtime or boredom, so I became more aggressive at stopping that.[0]

I also found the book Deep Work by Cal Newport to be helpful in staying more focused.[1]

>As you shared here (https://mtlynch.io/solo-developer-year-1/), doubts are natural when you haven't succeeded yet; how did you keep going? Did you ever come close to giving up and going back to corporate America?

I went into it with the expectation that it might take 3-5 years for me to find a successful business, so I think that was helpful. I've spoken to other founders who feel disappointed that nothing they're doing is working because they were expecting success to come quickly.

I definitely did worry that I wasn't cut out for being a founder and that my skills made a lot more sense for a big tech employee. The thing I found comforting was reading stories and listening to podcast interviews with other founders where they talked about how many failures they had before they landed on the right business.

I never came close to going back to a corporate job because I knew I had enough savings to last me, but if my financial situation had been different, I might have given up before I landed on something that worked.

>I believe you have a partner; how did this affect your relationship with your partner?

There are lots of effects in different directions. Me not having a regular job means that my income is less consistent and certain, and she absorbs some of the risks I take. I also feel like I'm not a good partner when I'm stressed a lot about work, and so part of my motivation in de-stressing the business has been to be a better partner in my personal relationship.

>Knowing what you know now, what would you do differently?

I wish I'd done educational products ("info products") earlier. They're like a microcosm of the experience of launching a product because you have to find customers, pitch to them effectively, and then deliver something they'll want. Like you can do that whole cycle in a month, whereas it would probably take 3-10x that long to do it with a SaaS. I made my first course right as TinyPilot was getting traction, and that course made more than anything I'd done in the previous three years.[2]

[0] https://mtlynch.io/eliminate-distractions/

[1] https://mtlynch.io/book-reports/deep-work/

[2] https://mtlynch.io/solo-developer-year-4/#hit-the-front-page...

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elbear ◴[] No.39407782[source]
| The thing I found comforting was reading stories and listening to podcast interviews with other founders where they talked about how many failures they had before they landed on the right business.

Can you recommend some?

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1. mtlynch ◴[] No.39409271[source]
The first 50 episodes of the Indie Hackers podcast had a big influence on how I approached bootstrapping. The episodes that stood out in particular are:

- Pieter Levels: https://www.indiehackers.com/podcast/043-pieter-levels-of-no...

- Tracy Osborn: https://www.indiehackers.com/podcast/029-tracy-osborn-of-hel...

Josh Pigford (who sold Baremetrics for $4M) has also documented all of his failed ventures:

https://joshpigford.com/projects

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2. elbear ◴[] No.39413328[source]
Thank you!