Resources to help independent developers make money.
Making money from your own code has never been easier, but it's still hard. Here, I try to curate a list of resources to help everyone interested in making money from their digital products get inspired and give it a try. Be it monetizing sideprojects, bootstrapping business ideas, etc.
Projects don't need to be big, actually, it's better if they are not, they just need to be profitable. They might provide a passive income after the initial bulk of work, and who knows, maybe even help you reach financial independence.
Going indie does have lots of lifestyle perks :)
All these resources might help inspire you and put you on the right track but in the end what matters is to MAKE and TRY stuff. So devour this content responsibly :)
Contributions are more than welcome.
by @mezod
Notes:
- If [$], it means it's not free and probably means I haven't tried it but still decided to add it because of the several references.
- This repo was once #1 on Github Trending! :_)
- Communities
- Newsletters
- Podcasts
- Talks
- Posts
- Blogs
- Case Studies
- Events
- Books
- Tools
- Courses
- Specific Topics
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Learn from profitable businesses and side projects. IndieHackers is probably the catalyst for this new wave of interest on making an independent income. It is a collection of interviews to successful developers about their products. IndieHackers has been especially interesting to follow since it's been an indie project itself. Courtland Allen has been very transparent about how he built it. The last news make one think that the forum/community will grow.
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News for bootstrappers, not VC hackers. Hacker-News like forum. Peter Bhat Harkins started it in early 2016 and I've found it of great value ever since. Also, it runs on great software, which is always a thing to appreciate!
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A forum for bootstrappers. Started in 2013 by Ian Landsman and Andrey Butov as a continuation to the now defunct The Business of Software.
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##passiveincome on freenode
Matthew Mallard created this channel on the freenode IRC network in early 2017 and it has been pretty active and growing ever since.
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News for hackers, mostly technology and entrepreneurship. Not specific to indie devs but a must for everyone interested in computer science, creating products and making money. A lot of indie devs lurking around. Started by Paul Graham.
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Exclusive community for indie makers run by Justin Jackson. Currently there's a waitlist. Cost is $249 for lifetime access. I'm not a member so I can't personally endorse it. Generally, I'm skeptic on products targetting indie makers but I still found it relevant to add this specific product because of cross references. Some people might find it interesting. Feel free to reference to reviews!
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FounderCafe [$]
FounderCafe is an invite-only, online community of entrepreneurs helping each other succeed run by Rob Walling and Mike Taber. $99 every 3 months. I'm not a member so I can't personally endorse it.
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Nugget.one [$]
Nugget.one focuses on helping software developers launch successful side projects. Being part of the community gives access to case studios, bi-weekly webinars and live mentoring. Run by Justin Vincent. $19.99 per month.
- r/Entrepreneur - Not exclusive to indies/bootstrappers but still with relevant content for us.
- Bootstrapped Slack (invite here invite link currently dead, working on it!) - Slack that probably originated from the bootstrapped.fm forum. Not really moderated.
- r/SideProject - Quite active
- Sideprojectxyz (invite here) - Slack community for people working on their sideprojects.
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Weekly digest of the best user-submitted articles featured on bootstrapped.io. Curated by Darren Stuart.
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Newsletter containing the newest interviews of the site and also the best threads from the forum. Normally ships on thursdays. By Courtland Allen.
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Stories, lessons, and inspiration for independent makers. By Justin Jackson.
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Content about bootstrapping, SaaS, growth, marketing, and other startup topics curated by Mac Martine.
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Started in 2010 by Rob Walling and Mike Taber have covered almost everything there is to cover in micropreneurship. Here you can find a 'best of' selection of their podcast.
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A podcast focused on great products and the people who make them. Since 2012. By Justin Jackson.
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Several different topics around bootstrapping online businesses. Started in 2013 by Ian Landsman and Andrey Butov.
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"To share the lessons we learn by doing, and learn from the things that others are doing, to help us all get ahead as we bootstrap our businesses online." Since 2013 by Brian Casel and Jordan Gal.
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A podcast for developreneurs. Run by Josh Earl, John Sonmez, Derick Bailey and Charles Max Wood since 2014.
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Podcast where Courtland Allen interviews some of the most successful indiehackers featured on the site. Started in early 2017 already has 12 episodes with great content and very carefully crafted related notes and links.
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Interviews with entrepreneurs and bootstrappers about bootstrapping, SaaS, growth, marketing, and other startup topics. By Mac Martine.
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Not really specific to developers but with great content on the several types of products to make a living online. By Pat Flynn.
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Ben Orenstein (former growth/product lead at Thoughtbot) and Derrick Reimer (co-founder of Drip) talk weekly about growing their SaaS businesses.
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David Heinemeier Hansson at Startup School 08 by David Heinemeier Hansson
Bootstrapping as the better alternative to VC funded startups.
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Tyler Tringas on Storemapper and MicroSaaS by Tyler Tringas
15 minutes filled with a lot of valuable information and insights where Tyler presents the concept of Micro-SaaS and tells us his story.
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Bootstrapping Side Projects To Profit by Pieter Levels by Pieter Levels
Probably one of the most known indie hackers of the last couple of years talks about how to turn our sideprojects into profitable businesses. Very straight to the point, Pieter always provides a lot of insightful thoughts. By the way, don't get fooled by his lifestyle, his success is 500% work.
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Marketing for Minorities by Patrick McKenzie
Lightning 7 minute talk by one of the most respected indie developers. The point Patrick is trying to make, is that solo developers can target way smaller and niche markets which might have low competition and be very profitable from a solo business point of view.
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Talking about CoderPad and business at Dropbox by Vincent Woo
Talk on building a successful small solo business.
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I’m Launching 12 Startups in 12 Months by Pieter Levels
The challenge that started it all for Pieter. It inspired me to do something similar. What matters is to create and ship a lot, learning in the process, until something is worth pushing further.
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Don't Call Yourself A Programmer, And Other Career Advice by Patrick McKenzie
Patrick has written over 500 posts and I have obviously not read all of them, but of the many I've read, I chose this one...
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Running A Software Business On 5 Hours A Week by Patrick McKenzie
...and this one too :D
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Storemapper: Bootstrapped to $50,000/year in 2 years (with live metrics) by Tyler Tringas
This is just an example of a business more than one would be happy with :-) Besides liking how Tyler shares his story building Storemapper, I think he always maximizes for valuable content.
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Why You Should Do A Tiny Product First by Amy Hoy
This is the first of a series by Amy Hoy. I'll be honest, I don't even remember what this was about, just that I found it worth my time. Oh wait, yeah, Amy told me not to code, at least at first. I haven't still gotten there...
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The Epic Guide to Bootstrapping a SaaS Startup from Scratch — By Yourself by Clifford Oravec
Another series on what solo bootstrapping is about, with an offensive twist.
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How to get more customers by Justin Jackson.
This is a bit of a too specific topic for this general selection of posts, but the hell, you need to read it before it's too late. Ok, I'm starting to sound marketingy :D
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Indie Startups: The Ingredients of Success by fpgaminer
Numbers with meaning. fpgaminer analyzed all the products featured on IndieHackers, extracted some statistics and got to some conclusions. Worth reading it also for the approach.
There's obviously a million posts on the topic. I'm sure this is not a good selection but it'll get you started. Here you can find some more:
- Bootstrappers.io
- HackerNoon
- HackerNews
- 7 Articles for Indie Devs to Start Shipping - great selection by Alex Moskovski
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Over 500 posts that show how Patrick went from being a software engineer to running successful software businesses.
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Lessons Learned by a Solo Entrepreneur.
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Lots of advice on bootstrapping businesses if you dig between Pieter's multiple interests.
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On SaaS and his journey with Storemapper.
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Software and business have always been topics Joel has covered. StackOverflow and Trello prove he knows what he's talking about.
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The blog of the basecamp people, mostly David Heinemeier Hansson and Jason Fried, on business and how to run bootstrapped companies.
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Maciej Cegłowski's blog for his bookmarking tool, pinboard, useful in showing the growth of a successful solo business.
- The Foundation - Turning the process of creating a B2B SaaS business into a formula.
- Price Intelligently - Blog focused on the economics of the SaaS business model and SaaS pricing.
- Moz Blog - For anything related to SEO.
- Paul Graham - A lot of content for big funded startups, but still relevant to bootstrappers.
- John O'Nolan - Especially the older posts on how he started ghost.
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From capturing a trend to getting acquired in less than one year.
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Solving your own pain, representing a movement, moving fast and working hard by a serial bootstrapper.
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Transparent growth and financial reports by a solo saas founder.
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A collection of bootstrapped companies by the people at 37 signals.
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An example of riding the wave.
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Discover startups with transparent revenue numbers.
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MicroConf [$]
"The worlds biggest conference for the worlds smallest self-funded software companies". It has two editions, one more focused to starters, and another one focused on growth. Both last two days. Las Vegas. Run by Rob Walling and Mike Taber.
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MicroConf Europe [$]
MicroConf's european edition. Barcelona. Run by Rob Walling and Mike Taber.
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BaconBizConf [$]
"An alliance for B2B bootstrappers". Philadelphia. By Amy Hoy and Alex Hillman.
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"Business of Software is not based in Silicon Valley for good reason. It is about building long term, sustainable software businesses. ...a thoughtful conference, where people come to listen and learn, not self promote and shout". Boston. Team behind BoS.
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Business of Software Europe [$]
BoS european edition. London. Team behind BoS.
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B2B Rocks [$]
"Leading conferences for B2B and SaaS startups". Popular business model for indie devs. Paris. Sydney.
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PeersConf [$]
"A conference for those who make the web, and make it their business". Seattle (changes every year). By Jessica D'Amico.
- Start Small, Stay Small [$] by Rob Walling.
- Building Micro-SaaS Businesses by Tyler Tringas. - A collection of very well structured posts that cover the most initial struggles of an indie dev on the way to build a MicroSaaS. I can personally endorse it and I'm eager to read the yet to be written chapters :)
- The Single Founder Handbook [$] by Mike Taber.
- Getting Real by 37signals. - More focused on building web applications, I really recommend it. Short, straight to the point, very easy to read and full of valuable content.
- MAKE [$] by Pieter Levels.
- Rework [$] by 37signals.
- Just Fucking Ship [$] by Amy Hoy and Alex Hillman.
- Marketing for Developers [$] by Justin Jackson.
- Groundera.com - A collection of indie books, most of them free, for entrepreneurs. By Philipp.
- The SaaS Bootstrapper book list - Collection curated by Mac Martine.
- Badass: Making Users Awesome [$] by Kathy Sierra.
- Anything You Want [$] by Derek Sivers.
- Founders at Work [$] by Jessica Livingstone.
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The SaaS Bootstrapper Startup Resources
A collection of resources for bootstrappers put together by Mac Martine.
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A list of SaaS, PaaS and IaaS offerings that have free tiers of interest to devops and infradev. Very useful for bootstrappers to keep initial costs low ;) By R. I. Pienaar.
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Another list of SaaS, PaaS, and Iaas offerings that have free tiers for developers on a budget. Very useful for exploring ideas and building out proof of concept. By Guillaume (256kb).
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Spectacular list of categorized tools for developers resulting from HackerNews threads. By Chris Barber and Craig Davison.
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"This is a list of Free Software network services and web applications which can be hosted locally. Selfhosting is the process of locally hosting and managing applications instead of renting from SaaS providers." Lots of salvageable software :P by Edward D.
Again, I'm not quite fond of listing [$] products made by indie developers targetting indie developers, especially because I haven't tried them myself, but due to several references I assume they are probably worth it and some people might find value in learning about them.
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"An online marketing course for software developers & product people". Read some reviews here. By Justin Jackson.
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30x500 Academy [$]
"Pick your customer. Learn how they tick. Learn what they need, want, and are ready to buy." Find reviews here(good), here(bad) and here. By Amy Hoy and Alex Hillman.
In the future, I'd like to have a list of resources for more specific topics or FAQs such as:
- 'how to get ideas'
- 'how to find betatesters'
- 'how to find my first 100 users'
- 'how to validate my idea'
- 'where to advertise my project'
- 'what paid ads work better'
- 'i've got 100 users, how to grow'
- 'how do i deal with support'
- 'types of digital products'
- 'legal aspects'
- 'typical mistakes'
Help me make a proper list of specific topics!