

Indie Hackers
Courtland Allen and Channing Allen
Courtland and Channing Allen interview the ambitious indie hackers who are turning their ideas and side projects into profitable online businesses. Explore the latest strategies and tools founders are using to capitalize on new opportunities, escape the 9-to-5 grind, and create their own personal revenue-generating machines. The future is indie!
Episodes
Mentioned books

5 snips
Feb 25, 2020 • 54min
#150 – Acquiring the Experience to Make It as a Solo Founder with Jen Yip of Lunch Money
Founder of Lunch Money, Jen Yip, shares her solo founder journey in developing a budgeting app. Topics include her diverse experiences, strategies for competition, and balancing work to avoid burnout. Also, discusses being a digital 'snowmad' and working overseas.

Feb 19, 2020 • 1h 1min
#149 – Generating Passive Income by Teaching What You Know with Greg Rog of LearnUX
Greg Rog (@greg_rog) is one of the few indie hackers I know who's actually managed to build a passive income business. His website, LearnUX.io, makes over $10k per month, yet he spends less than a day each month updating the content and answering questions. His secret? A combination of hard work over a sustained period of time, obsessive focus on making a 10x better product, and embracing no-code tools to support automation despite knowing how to code himself. In this episode, Greg walks me through his story, his successes, and his failures, and we discuss why teaching what you know is an underrated path that anyone can embrace.Transcript, speaker information, and more: https://www.indiehackers.com/podcast/149-greg-rog-of-learnux

Feb 12, 2020 • 28min
#148 – Quick Chat with Nathan Rosidi of Strata Scratch
Nathan Rosidi has bootstrapped his side project, Strata Scratch, to 2500 users and over $1,500 in monthly recurring revenue. In this episode we discuss the lessons he's learned from past failures, how to prioritize what to work on when you're getting ideas from so many different people, and why it's both a blessing and a curse to be able to take things slowly as an indie hacker.Transcript, speaker information, and more: https://www.indiehackers.com/podcast/148-quick-chat-with-nathan-rosidi

Feb 12, 2020 • 54min
#147 – Having Fun on the Path to Independence with Cory Zue of Place Card Me
Cory Zue (@czue) made over $26,000 in profit from multiple side projects in 2019, including a printable place card business and a Django-powered SaaS template. In this episode Cory explains how his journey began by taking a sabbatical from work, he lays out his plan to reach financial independence by 2023, and he shares some tips for ensuring your indie hacker journey is an enjoyable one the whole way through.Transcript, speaker information, and more: https://www.indiehackers.com/podcast/147-cory-zue-of-place-card-me

Feb 4, 2020 • 1h 8min
#146 – Refusing to Take No for an Answer with Alexandria Procter of DigsConnect
Alexandria Procter (@alexprocter101) is the last person you would ever describe as timid. When the bureaucracy at her college in South Africa failed to address a massive student housing crisis, Alex taught took things into her own hands, learned to code, and created a startup to help. In this episode, Alex and I talk about the personality traits and the economic realities that drive people to take risks and solve problems. We attempt to answer the question, "What do founders in the developing world have that founders elsewhere do not, and vice versa?" Alex also shares the incredible story behind how her startup, DigsConnect, has grown to find over 70,000 beds for students in just two years.Transcript, speaker information, and more: https://www.indiehackers.com/podcast/146-alex-procter-of-digsconnect

Jan 30, 2020 • 1h 3min
#145 – The Slow, Deliberate Process of Making a SaaS Business Work with Jane Portman of Userlist
Jane Portman (@uibreakfast) is no stranger to making money online. Not only has she run a successful consultancy for nearly a decade, but she's also published 4 books and become a leading authority on UX and product design. So when Jane decided to start a SaaS company—Userlist— she was surprised to learn just slow and difficult the process can be. In this episode, Jane and I discuss the variables that makes companies faster or slower to grow, the importance of nailing your customer messaging so people understand what it is that you do, and her tips for how other founders can stick through the tough times to turn their side projects into successful SaaS businesses.Transcript, speaker information, and more: https://www.indiehackers.com/podcast/145-jane-portman-of-userlist

8 snips
Jan 24, 2020 • 1h 8min
#144 – Putting People First as a Founder with Vlad Magdalin of Webflow
Vlad Magdalin (@callmevlad) might just be the most principled founder I've had on the podcast. "When it came to making hard decisions, I've leaned more on my morality rather than my business sense. That's what I regret the least." Sticking to his heart has paid off. Not only has he built a company that's changing and improving lives by the millions, but he's also grown it to millions in revenue and 155 employees. In this episode Vlad and I talk about the ups and downs of raising money from investors, the impact of building something that empowers your customers to create, and the compounding benefits of focusing on people and relationships over profit and product.Transcript, speaker information, and more: https://www.indiehackers.com/podcast/144-vlad-magdalin-of-webflow

Jan 17, 2020 • 56min
#143 – Following Your Passion to Become an Indie Hacker with Pete Codes of No CS Degree
Pete Macleod (@petecodes) didn't have a cushy fallback plan when he set out to become an indie hacker. Eight months ago he was unemployed, and a few months after that he was working a minimum wage job with dangerous clientele. He knew figured his best bet would be to strike out on his own: "I don't really have anything to lose at this point, so I suppose I'll just go for it." Today he runs No CS Degree, a profitable online business that helps aspiring software engineers who don't have the stereotypical credentials. In this episode, Pete and I discuss his remarkable ability to get help from others, his techniques for rapidly learning how to create a successful company, and the reasons it was crucial for him to solve a problem he was passionate about.Transcript, speaker information, and more: https://www.indiehackers.com/podcast/143-pete-codes-of-no-cs-degree

Jan 14, 2020 • 57min
#142 – Building the Ultimate Lifestyle Business with Dmitry Dragilev of JustReachOut.io
Dmitry Dragilev, an entrepreneur who prioritizes family life, shares how he built JustReachOut.io from $0 to $30,000/month revenue in 25 hours a week. Topics include balancing work success with personal relationships, navigating SaaS business challenges, empowering indie hackers with PR, and leveraging PR strategies for growth.

Jan 2, 2020 • 1h 34min
#141 – Bootstrapping an App to Millions Through Sheer Persistence with Cesar Kuriyama of 1 Second Everyday
Cesar Kuriyama bootstrapped an app to millions through sheer persistence. He shares his journey from working in visual effects to creating One Second Everyday. The speakers discuss the value of taking a year off and pursuing creative projects. They also explore the process of building an app, launching a Kickstarter campaign, and the growth and success of the One Second Everyday app. They emphasize the importance of taking small steps towards big goals.