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Bootstrapping Start-ups

An anonymous reader writes "How many of us wanted to follow our dream and start our own start-up? How many of us thought that it can't be done due to costs, the need of big bucks and convincing some snotty VC? Well it didn't stop these guys. The most current success story is social networking software Huminity which has been on /. before. The recipe for their success was: open source, clustering $100/mo servers, using the web to find native translators instead of using over priced local ones and hiring GUI designers from popular skins download sites."

6 of 285 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Prepare for SPAM! by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 4, Informative

    This is a brand new account reposting a highly moderated comment from the previous slashdot story.

    While the comment remains true, I hope the mods will send him right back down to -1. It looks like a troll charging up karma to me.

    --

    There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
  2. Yes (Re:Only problem... by dmorin · · Score: 4, Informative
    • Sketch out a business plan that gives you some clue of how much money you really need. Hint, you do not need a million dollars.
    • Pretend you're optimizing code and shrink the hell out of it. You don't need to pay for a hosting service above and beyond your cable modem in the basement. You don't need brand new machines when you can buy from ebay. You don't need an office, or business cards, or a travel budget. You don't need to hire person X if you can convince them to do it for free for version 1. Repeat ad nauseam.
    • Go out and get the stupid money. Ask relatives. Rack up credit card debt. Tell them you're making an independent film or something. Move back in with your parents if you have to.
    • Get customers. You may even find yourself a sugar daddy that likes your idea so much that they will pay up front, enabling you to do more sooner. This is how many startups get started, when a big company says "I am willing to be your only customer for awhile, even though I know you have no product, and I will pay you to build it, on the promise that I will get lots of profit once you really do have product."
    It's been done plenty of times before. It's not inconceivable once you have a better handle on how much you need. Everybody thinks they need a million dollars to start, but in reality you can probably get started for a few hundred or a few thousand. And if your idea has any legs, then raising a few thousand bucks should not be out of the realm of possibility.
  3. Check your contract by Kelar · · Score: 3, Informative

    Many companies have you sign explicit NDA/Non-Compete agreements which will explicitly disallow you from doing any outside work.
    Some will even claim that any intellectual property created as a result of you working outside of work hours will be owned by them.
    Many people have been screwed by this in the past.

  4. Translation ? by nsebban · · Score: 3, Informative

    Are you sure they paid someone to translate pages ? The french translation must have been made by some guy who had never talked french before :)

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    ____
    nico
    Nico-Live
  5. The $700.00 toilet seat... by djh101010 · · Score: 3, Informative

    ...was an entire inside wall of a compartment from an airplane, with an integrated toilet seat. It's held up as an example of wasteful government spending, but it's not as represented. I'd expect the hundred-dollar-hammer and similar stories probably have similar truths behind them.

    Not saying governments don't waste our money, but this one just plain is misrepresented.

  6. examples of startups to look at by goon · · Score: 3, Informative

    a good read for any startups is Joel Spolsky's journey in building his company from scratch. Put aside your predjudices about his software origins or the market he is aiming at, but make sure you read and digest some of the ideas.



    It's a cheap way to read how he's organised his company from 1999 to the present.

    --
    peterrenshaw ~ Another Scrappy Startup