

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

15 snips
Sep 24, 2019 • 1h 38min
#120 – Seeking Truth as a Founder with Patrick Campbell of ProfitWell
Patrick Campbell, founder of ProfitWell, discusses the importance of finding root causes in startups, the significance of pricing and churn for growth, and shares how he grew ProfitWell to over $10M/year. Also explores critical thinking, problem analysis, re-educating the market, value metrics for pricing, and building founders' truths.

13 snips
Sep 20, 2019 • 45min
#119 – Sales Tips Every Founder Should Know with Steli Efti of Close
Steli Efti (@Steli) knows more about sales than anyone else I know. He's also the founder of Close.com, a profitable all-in-one CRM tool doing many millions in revenue, so he's the perfect person to answer the question: What should founders know about sales? So in this episode, my goal was to extract as many founder-specific sales tactics as I could from Steli. Whether you're growing a business now, or it's something you hope to do in the future, Steli's advice isn't something you can afford to miss.Transcript, speaker information, and more: https://www.indiehackers.com/podcast/119-steli-efti-of-close

Sep 16, 2019 • 1h 7min
#118 – The Magic of Choosing a Great Market with Justin Jackson of Transistor
Justin Jackson (@mijustin) has spent a lifetime as an entrepreneur, working on products, hosting podcasts, running communities, creating courses, and more. But it wasn't until he created his newest business, Transistor, that he fully realized the power that comes from choosing the right market as a founder. Justin joined me on the podcast to talk about the advantages of solving a straightforward problem, the importance of finding the truth in the early days, and why it might be worth it to wait for the right idea for the right market.Transcript, speaker information, and more: https://www.indiehackers.com/podcast/118-justin-jackson-of-transistor

Sep 13, 2019 • 39min
#117 – Becoming Indistractable as a Founder with Nir Eyal, Author of Hooked
Nir Eyal, author of Hooked, discusses how to become indistractable as a founder on Indie Hackers. Topics include challenges of prioritization and execution, understanding distraction and traction, mastering internal triggers, the importance of pre-commit devices, and overcoming procrastination.

9 snips
Sep 9, 2019 • 1h 8min
#116 – Exploring Ideas and Exploiting the Good Ones with Justin Mares of Kettle and Fire
Justin Mares, founder of Kettle and Fire and Perfect Keto, shares his journey of scaling two health food companies to over $10 million each. He emphasizes the importance of avoiding a scarcity mentality and offers insight on alleviating market risk through smoke testing. Justin discusses the balance between product innovation and effective marketing, and how to navigate the food startup landscape with strategic execution. He also reveals the significance of genuine interests and experimentation in entrepreneurial success.

37 snips
Sep 6, 2019 • 29min
#115 – Quick Chat with Harry Dry of Marketing Examples
Harry Dry (@harrydry) is the founder of Marketing Examples, a fast-growing showcase of successful startup marketing stories. Since launching the site a few months ago, he's grown his email list to 5000 subscribers, won product of the week on Product Hunt, and is approaching $1,000 in monthly recurring revenue. Harry joined the show to talk about reducing the risks of being a founder, how to grow your Twitter following, and the importance of building the product that only you can build.Transcript, speaker information, and more: https://www.indiehackers.com/podcast/115-quick-chat-with-harry-dry

Sep 2, 2019 • 60min
#114 – The Business of Podcasting with Jeff Meyerson of Software Engineering Daily
Jeff Meyerson (@the_prion) is the host of Software Engineering Daily, a popular podcast that averages 20,000 downloads a day. It's also a successful business that generates close to $60,000/month in advertising revenue. Jeff joined the show to talk about the business of podcasting: What goes into producing an episode? How do you ask great questions? What's the best way to grow your listenership and land lucrative advertising deals? And what lessons from podcasting apply more broadly to all indie hackers?Transcript, speaker information, and more: https://www.indiehackers.com/podcast/114-jeff-meyerson-of-software-engineering-daily

Aug 30, 2019 • 31min
#113 – Quick Chat with Ben Orenstein of Tuple
Ben Orenstein (@r00k) is the founder of Tuple, a remote pair programming app for the Mac that fills the void left by ScreenHero's disappearance. Ben joined the show for a second time to catch us up on Tuple's progress as a profitable pre-launch business. We talked about the benefits of creating a public roadmap that you can share with customers, the importance of learning by selling, Ben's gameplan for Tuple's public launch, and why it's important to focus on growth long before launch day.Transcript, speaker information, and more: https://www.indiehackers.com/podcast/113-quick-chat-with-ben-orenstein

Aug 26, 2019 • 1h 5min
#112 – From Side Project to Full-Time Founder with Tommy Griffith of ClickMinded
What happens when the money you're making from your side project eclipses your salary from your full-time job? Tommy Griffith (@TommyGriffith) found out in the best way possible when he began generating six figures in revenue just a few years after he started teaching people everything he knew about SEO. Today his business, ClickMinded, generates over $40,000/month. In this episode we discuss the best ways to bootstrap an email list, why it takes 1000 days for a side project to replace your salary, and how a taste of freedom can make you unemployable.Transcript, speaker information, and more: https://www.indiehackers.com/podcast/112-tommy-griffith-of-clickminded

Aug 23, 2019 • 29min
#111 – Quick Chat with Jessica Chan of Coder Coder
Jessica Chan (@thecodercoder) is the founder of Coder Coder, a collection of resources that help self-taught web developers learn to code the same way that she did. Jessica joined the show to share how she came up with her idea and got her first users, how she grew her Instagram account to 30k followers and her website to over 60k visits per month, and how she plans to make a living from her business as an indie hacker.Transcript, speaker information, and more: https://www.indiehackers.com/podcast/111-quick-chat-with-jessica-chan