The best Hacker News stories from Show from the past week
Latest posts:
Show HN: Paletter – Create Professional Color Palettes from a Single Color
Show HN: hackernews_tui – A Terminal UI to browse Hacker News discussions
Show HN: MarkShow – Create Slideshows with Markdown
Show HN: MarkShow – Create Slideshows with Markdown
Show HN: Verilog2factorio
Show HN: Verilog2factorio
Show HN: Verilog2factorio
Show HN: DbGate – open-source, cross-platform SQL+noSQL database client
Show HN: I built a tool to generate triangulated art from images
Show HN: I built a tool to generate triangulated art from images
How to find a job as Software Developer in Germany
Show HN: I made a sandbox game to help with financial planning
Show HN: I made a sandbox game to help with financial planning
Show HN: My cofounder and I created a social platform for investment ideas
Show HN: Shepherd.com – Discover books in a new way, like wandering a bookstore
Show HN: I'm working on a open-source, self-hosted alternative to Disqus
Show HN: I made a Hacker News for the automotive industry
Show HN: Side project passed $2.5k/mo revenue after 2 years (Phoenix and Vue)
Several years ago, I had a client whose salespeople were using Excel to generate sales proposals. This was inefficient and the resulting documents looked awful, so I developed a new process for them using a no-code platform. It featured a web form that was tied to a workflow engine, and a fancy PDF got emailed to the customer to sign.<p>When the client loved the solution, I knew I was on to something. However, the no-code platform wasn't very customizable, so I decided to rebuild the process as a SaaS product. The client's CTO wanted in and we became cofounders.<p>Today, we passed the $2,500/mo. threshold, and couldn't be more excited! (<a href="https://pricetable.io" rel="nofollow">https://pricetable.io</a>)<p>Things started slow. I wasn't a software developer by trade, so I was constantly "drinking from the fire hose." Also, my cofounder and I had disagreements regarding features, UX, sales strategy... you name it. We never fought, but initially there was a sense of disconnect.<p>Then one day, everything clicked. His company started to pilot our product, and after a few months became our first customer. Receiving feedback from real users was a breath of fresh air. It was also really eye-opening to see which assumptions we had made were slam dunks and which were hilariously wrong!<p>Things might have been easier had I picked a more mainstream stack like Rails/Django, but once I got up to speed with Elixir and Vue, development became a Zen-like experience. Both communities are very welcoming and immensely helpful. HN has also been an extraordinary source of inspiration; reading success stories always makes me launch my code editor! Similarly, hearing from companies that didn't make it helps us keep our expectations realistic.<p>Now we shift focus to finding new clients. We have a very solid success story and metrics to back it up. However, both my partner and I still have day jobs we need the income from, and the product requires a fairly high-touch sales approach. Any advice would be appreciated. :)
Show HN: Side project passed $2.5k/mo revenue after 2 years (Phoenix and Vue)
Several years ago, I had a client whose salespeople were using Excel to generate sales proposals. This was inefficient and the resulting documents looked awful, so I developed a new process for them using a no-code platform. It featured a web form that was tied to a workflow engine, and a fancy PDF got emailed to the customer to sign.<p>When the client loved the solution, I knew I was on to something. However, the no-code platform wasn't very customizable, so I decided to rebuild the process as a SaaS product. The client's CTO wanted in and we became cofounders.<p>Today, we passed the $2,500/mo. threshold, and couldn't be more excited! (<a href="https://pricetable.io" rel="nofollow">https://pricetable.io</a>)<p>Things started slow. I wasn't a software developer by trade, so I was constantly "drinking from the fire hose." Also, my cofounder and I had disagreements regarding features, UX, sales strategy... you name it. We never fought, but initially there was a sense of disconnect.<p>Then one day, everything clicked. His company started to pilot our product, and after a few months became our first customer. Receiving feedback from real users was a breath of fresh air. It was also really eye-opening to see which assumptions we had made were slam dunks and which were hilariously wrong!<p>Things might have been easier had I picked a more mainstream stack like Rails/Django, but once I got up to speed with Elixir and Vue, development became a Zen-like experience. Both communities are very welcoming and immensely helpful. HN has also been an extraordinary source of inspiration; reading success stories always makes me launch my code editor! Similarly, hearing from companies that didn't make it helps us keep our expectations realistic.<p>Now we shift focus to finding new clients. We have a very solid success story and metrics to back it up. However, both my partner and I still have day jobs we need the income from, and the product requires a fairly high-touch sales approach. Any advice would be appreciated. :)
Show HN: Compare news from the political left and right