Startups How to know which things to do that don't scale? |
- How to know which things to do that don't scale?
- 20 Mistakes (Don’t Make) When Buying Wholesale From China
- Any ideas
- I have a startup idea, but no time/interests to start it myself.
- When to bring in non-technical cofounder?
- Share Dilution Among Founders
How to know which things to do that don't scale? Posted: 03 Jul 2021 09:35 AM PDT I am working on a B2B SaaS for landlord and tenant communications. I am nearly done with the paid MVP (non-paid MVP got feedback that it was not useful enough) and I am at one final crossroad on tasks to do. The final ticket for coding is to create a way for users to delete their accounts should they no longer want to use the service. Knowing what it has to do on the back end the script set to do it is about 4 days (part-time) of work where I am thinking I could put a button that pops up a modal and gives the user my business email - not a support one - and they can email me to close their account which I can do for them in a matter of 10 minutes. I know this won't scale past 2-3 deletions per day but I am thinking it might be a fair trade-off for now while I focus on getting customers. How do you pick which things to do that don't scale and which ones you should automate? [link] [comments] |
20 Mistakes (Don’t Make) When Buying Wholesale From China Posted: 03 Jul 2021 11:36 PM PDT |
Posted: 03 Jul 2021 11:24 AM PDT Hello everyone, I was wondering if anyone had any ideas on how to go about solving a software issue with a controller inside of your product? I'm a mechanical engineer by trade and I feel completely helpless. I don't really know how to explain it. Like my product is now mechanically sound, functions properly, all motors installed etc. It's just the software which I would like to solve but it's so overwhelming and demotivating when everything else is there! I look forward to your guys thoughts! Cheers! [link] [comments] |
I have a startup idea, but no time/interests to start it myself. Posted: 04 Jul 2021 01:50 AM PDT Hey, I believe I have a great revolutionary startup idea which may fill a big hole in people needs and would probably create a new market on its own. However I do not have a time nor interests in dropping my current lifestyle in order to realize that. I would like to develop myself in other directions that are not giving very much money, but are more interesting for me nonetheless. Having said that. What can I do with that idea? Are there any tools or systems where I could present/sell that idea? if ofcorse it's interesting to investors/startup creators. [link] [comments] |
When to bring in non-technical cofounder? Posted: 01 Jul 2021 07:06 AM PDT Hi Everyone. I'm a software engineer building a VR fitness startup. I've been working on the product for 6 months now and probably have another 3 months to go before I can bring some early alpha / beta users on board. I know I'm eventually going to need a co-founder to handle the non-technical side of the business and share the workload, but I'm unsure when is a good time to bring them in (I don't have anyone in mind yet). What should a non-technical founder be doing while the initial product is being created? [link] [comments] |
Posted: 01 Jul 2021 11:14 AM PDT Hey guys bit of a technical question: If founders have different equity in a company (ie among three founders let's say a 50-30-20 split) does equity get diluted (assume a 10% dilution) A) equally among the three (3.33% each) B) unequally among the three but all portions still get diluted (50 gives up 5, 30 gives up 3, 20 gives up 2) C) Equity is diluted first from the person with the most and then the others if necessary (50 gives up 10 to make it 40-30-20) Or is it just a case by case thing? Assume a Seed round for this [link] [comments] |
You are subscribed to email updates from Welcome to /r/startups! Where rapid growth and scaling sets us apart!. To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. | Email delivery powered by Google |
Google, 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043, United States |
No comments:
Post a Comment