The Top Three Mistakes That Slowed Me Down When I Started Learning to Code
In hindsight, I could have improved much quicker.
Here you go. Everything I've come up with so far.
In hindsight, I could have improved much quicker.
Despite chess computers, people still watch chess games.
Nobody likes networking, yet everybody does it.
Stop focusing on services. Focus on problems instead.
Is my experience in the music industry really an asset?
Years of playing music, but not having fun. Mistakes I won't repeat.
A single coffee chat can make me doubt my goals.
Few things in my life are more powerful than relationships. Here's what I do to bring new people into my life.
A short summary of a great marketing idea.
If you are solving a known problem, you shouldn't validate the idea, you should validate the quality.
Your problems and challenges can seem unsurmountable. But is that really the case?
I have been quite busy the past weeks. Now, I'm stressed. Time for a break.
Most people visit the page from their phones - it should work on smaller screens, too.
People can now try the app for free. Only the last features are blocked behind a paywall.
The Sign-Up flow is done, but I'm not moving as fast as I could.
I have decided to update my offer, and done the first steps to update the sign-up flow and user-credit system.
How do you get good fast? Create projects, just start. But is this true? What if there's a better way?
Your written list of priorities doesn't really help, does it?
If you're just starting out, there's a lot of friction. Everything is exhausting. You can solve it by building momentum.
The ad campaign is picking up pace, but nobody's buying. Time to change the offer.
Is your mind stuck on two opposing options? What if you lifted your foot off the brake, and went full-speed into one direction?
New ads are up and running. But is my offer good enough? Would people feel stupid saying no to it?
The Google Ad campaign failed, so I'll try Meta instead. First, I needed a video. It turned out to be crappy, but I uploaded it anyway.
Angrily recording a demo video with an overheating laptop and overpaying for a Google Ad Campaign.
The first paying customer! Key takeaway: Simply take the next small step outside of your comfort zone. What is scary now will be your usual business in the future.
Before I jump head-first into building the product, let's test the waters first. I want to see actual interest from musicians! The best way? A fake marketing campaign.
In the last post, I talked about my idea to build an AI album cover generator. But is it actually possible to build something useful? Let's find out.
Well-known indie hackers are building realistic photo AI services. An interesting idea! Can I steal it somehow and build something for my niche, the music scene? Hmm...
Why do others always seem to have better ideas?