TL;DR: It's a Todo app I use personally every day. It solves my own problem and has taught me a lot about software development, design, and product management. While it's complete, it hasn't been publicly launched yet, and I'm struggling to decide on the next step.
I hadn't considered monetization until now since it started as a passion project. There’s a slim chance it could attract paying users (and maybe earn some pocket money), but at worst, I’ll remain its only user.
It doesn’t have fancy features, but they’re executed well enough to meet my workflow needs:
- Every todo list is text-based, allowing external work with .txt files.
- Extremely responsive UX, as most data syncs locally.
- Minute-level analytics to track time spent on tasks and projects.
If I decide to monetize it, it could provide valuable experience in running a business, though it might also become a significant time sink. I’d feel very proud if others used my work, but I know how competitive this field is, so that might not be realistic.
I’d greatly appreciate any recommendation or sugesstion! :)
Note: I'm based in Canada.
mooreds•1h ago
It's hard to give suggestions on your next steps without knowing:
* where you are
* what you want to accomplish
For instance, if you wanted to be a bootstrapped indie hacker, then maybe this is a product to start marketing and selling.
If, on the other hand, you want to be a FAANG engineer, then you might want to keep using this yourself, but do nothing else with it.
Or, if you wanted a job at a normal software product company, you could open source this and use the lessons you learned building it as material for interviews and proof you can do the job of a software engineer plus other aspects.
montague27•1h ago
I’m based in Canada and have no ambition to join a FAANG company. Listing it on my résumé would definitely boost my profile, especially for startups. I’m still figuring things out, but I envision creating a product that would allow me to work internationally, potentially opening the path to becoming a digital nomad.
However, I realized I might already be doing it wrong — as the old saying goes, “build and validate early.” I wonder how might one navigate this scenario?
montague27•1h ago
I hadn't considered monetization until now since it started as a passion project. There’s a slim chance it could attract paying users (and maybe earn some pocket money), but at worst, I’ll remain its only user.
It doesn’t have fancy features, but they’re executed well enough to meet my workflow needs:
- Every todo list is text-based, allowing external work with .txt files. - Extremely responsive UX, as most data syncs locally. - Minute-level analytics to track time spent on tasks and projects.
If I decide to monetize it, it could provide valuable experience in running a business, though it might also become a significant time sink. I’d feel very proud if others used my work, but I know how competitive this field is, so that might not be realistic.
I’d greatly appreciate any recommendation or sugesstion! :)
Note: I'm based in Canada.
mooreds•1h ago
* where you are
* what you want to accomplish
For instance, if you wanted to be a bootstrapped indie hacker, then maybe this is a product to start marketing and selling.
If, on the other hand, you want to be a FAANG engineer, then you might want to keep using this yourself, but do nothing else with it.
Or, if you wanted a job at a normal software product company, you could open source this and use the lessons you learned building it as material for interviews and proof you can do the job of a software engineer plus other aspects.
montague27•1h ago
However, I realized I might already be doing it wrong — as the old saying goes, “build and validate early.” I wonder how might one navigate this scenario?