Staying Solo vs Going Big?
In this day and age, a lot of people have their own vision of
making their Startup scale-up beyond their expectations. Making
their company reach the billion-dollar valuation so to speak.
My bet is not everyone wants to transform their Startup into a
Unicorn (believe or not).
Some of these founders are merely contented on making just a
million (millions not billions).
So now the situation comes to this... Will you rather
"Stay Solo or Go Big"?
To be more precise, will you prefer to have a Big team and have a
smaller profit margin (make more money generally)?
Or just go Solo with bigger profit margin (but end up having less
revenue than the former)?
What is it juicier to you... Forming a Big Team or Automating Everything?
Pieter Levels is close to full automation mode.
He makes tons of money but the kicker here is that he doesn't
employ anyone, doesn't spend money on advertising, and runs his
entire Web Dev projects in a PHP digital ocean server (last time I
checked).
For those who don't know him, Pieter is a serial maker and creator
of projects like...
nomadlist.com
remoteok.io
hoodmaps.com
makebook.io
airlinelist.com
Most of his projects are run through "Cron Jobs".
It is a command used for scheduling tasks to be executed sometime
in the future (or executed periodically to be more precise).
Cron is a Linux utility that schedules a command or script on your
server to run automatically at a specified time and date.
The beauty of this tool is that you don't have to stay up too late
running tasks when you'd rather be sleeping.
I mean you can go out on a date with the love of your life and
still able to run commands and scripts that have to operate during
off-hours (or dating hours in your case).
I'm gonna spare you the details about "Cron Jobs" and leave
you a link on this topic for further reference...
kubernetes.io
As far as I know, Pieter still makes more than 50k a month even
when some of his projects are drastically affected because of the
disturbing Covid-19 pandemic.
I believe that he still has a profit margin of 90% before taxes,
which is unquestionably good.
If you do the math, 50k a month is 600k in a year.
With a 90% profit margin and 30% taxes, he nets 378k per year in
the bank.
Almost 1k/day.
Not b*llshit money, but that’s a pretty solid number.
I remember getting paid 1k/month on my first deal and I was like
"Happy as a Clam".
Pieter's Automation helps in some respects as he can program the
robots to do what he doesn't want to repeatedly do for himself,
and they can run for years, maybe decades, without reprogramming
them.
He also believes that if he hires people, it would stop him from
improving his skills every day.
He will not only cultivate his unprecedented skills but also
acquire new ones.
He works on his products all by himself. He codes the backend,
front end, design the layout, the logos, and does all the
marketing.
In his previous blog, Pieter even mentioned that instead of hiring
people, he would rather do things himself to stay
"Relevant"!
He has a point, you know.
So are you convinced to Go Solo?
Or do you still want to Go Big and Hire people?
Let's talk about going Big this time.
First and foremost, you need to set up lots of things.
Important stuff like...
=> Proforma Financials (revenue and cashflow projections,
operational expenses)
=> Legal (corporate setup, permits, registrations)
=> Accounting (bookeeping system)
=> Banking Relationship (merchant accounts and payments)
=> Teambuilding (initial executive, board and officers)
=> HR (recruiting, payroll)
=> IT (computers,
telecommunications, office automation, security, and storage)
=> Growth (sales team and customer service)
Aside from hiring talented Software Engineers, Web Developers, and
even Web Designers...
Your company might be needing to hire (externally or internally) a
CFO, CTO, COO, CEO, even a Co-Founder.
And of course, and most important of all, you need a lot of "Seed Round" money to back up all of these investments and recurring expenses.
But once your company is able to acquire most of these commitment
then you can grow your Startup exponentially.
It's off to the races then. The sky's limit.
You can achieve almost anything because you got a team of experts
at your disposal.
Your Startup can and could be a Billion dollar enterprise especially when all your hired hands convert your company into a definitive "Well-Oiled Machine".
Ok now that you got the 2 perspectives... what will you choose
then?
"Stay Solo or Go Big"?
I guess it all boils down to personal preference.
It will totally depend on your liking, what suits your Startup
needs, and what do you think will be effective not only in the
short term but more firmly in the long term.
So is it a question about big team vs automating everything?
Is it a battle of humans vs robots?
We all know that we have to spend on server costs, security,
etc... regardless of what route we take. But it's the staffing
costs is what really matters...
Will you hire multiple hands or just rely on your own?
Humans are not trustworthy, but robots are not 100% reliable
too.
So which will you choose?
I browsed around the net and was amazed to find out that most
people would rather have the Pieter Levels scenario (the robots)
rather than going Big at all.
They say that they don't mind having little profit. They want the
steering wheel to be always in their hands and not to strangers.
If you ask me for my advice, here's what I am going to suggest to you...
From a scale of 1-10...
Pieter Levels scenario is the 10...
and Going Big scenario is the 1...
I would say you go around the range of 6-7. That is my safest
bet.
To be more accurate, you follow what Pieter has been doing with
his current projects... automating almost everything.
But not too much. You need people too... real ones.
Get somebody to take care of Sales and Marketing. Have somebody to
help you with the backend development... fixing bugs and new
updates.
Nobody is an island you know. You may like it or not but we humans
are social animals.
Especially in the Web Dev world where there is too much pressure
building things and competing with the new and upcoming
Startups.
We will always need people. We will always need friends that we
can rely on.
So what's gonna be... humans or robots?
I say both!
Francis Isberto
Friendillion.dev
P.S. Btw, if you need some help in Sales and
Marketing...
Or you need assistance in making "Stories that Sell"...
*Image from Taz Network