I've bootstrapped everything I've ever built. Yet, I constantly get investor pitches from bootcamp/accelerators/etc.
One of them I got just the other day put forward this interesting offer: "$25K for 6% equity" on my current bootstrapped project which is earning about $20k per month in profit.
Thanks, but no thanks!
That's a value for selling it to someone else in its entirety, but no one who runs a stable business is going to sell 6% of their company at those rates because it literally means that every share sale will turn a profit guaranteed in 6 months merely from dividends.
Imagine what the stock price of a company who boasted such dividends would be.
My first customer found me before my showHN post ( publicsonar.com - they needed a geoparsing tool). I'm not entirely sure how they found me, perhaps from a talk I gave on my book scanning project.
I also don't know how the other early customers found out, I'm not doing any marketing (other than conference presentations).
Incubators/Accelerators are the way forward. I have always been rabidly advocating for more public funded real accelerators (Not YC model but built like the college/university/ YC startup school model) which can take a risk on ideas.
Entrepreneurship is a mentality. Even if you fail the first one with the accelerator, you grow your horizons and will eventually succeed with the next startup.
> A budding minority within the tech community ... supplies an alternative:
A nice article (I am a fan of anything that supports reading!) but seriously, bootstrapping has been the default since literally forever (i.e. presumably since the beginning of commerce, before the invention of reading). Tons of successful businesses have been built that way, they may just not look that way to you.
Consider that many may be bootrapped businesses that later wanted money to grow more rapidly than organically. As companies like that will have already demonstrated market value and execution ability they can typically get better valuations than just a PPT or a PPT+MVP
Founder of Readwise here -- just posted this article from ~10 months ago on a whim. Happy to answer any qs or chat about how the decision to start bootstrapping has gone since then (well!)
How are guys exporting highlights from kindle? A couple of months ago, I was looking to implement a kindle to Evernote exporter. I couldn't find any official API with the capability, so I ended up writing a scrapper that did the work. See: https://github.com/nishanthvijayan/kindle-highlights-to-goog...
We actually maintain an open source tool called Bookcision which is for easily exporting your Kindle highlights which follows roughly the same approach we take (but is non-automatic, unlike our product):
Hi. I used to run a fanfiction site (which I sold about 2 years ago) and one of the things I found quite difficult was monetizing in this field. (I did integrate ebook exporters, readers and other rings and bells into the app after quite a bit of effort, getting very little in return.)
Is your experience similar to mine? How did you decide on the right pricing model?
> Now that we're bootstrapping, we've shifted away from a freemium business model (where users could optionally pay if they wanted) to a paid-only model after a free trial.
I think this is great, and where venture capital fails; having real demand and not only focus on growth.
readwise is so good that even though I LOVE physical books, I don’t buy them anymore. They wouldn’t get into my Readwise notes, which is now a crucial part of my daily workflow.
Would you mind sharing what device(s) you use, along with any other software / services / etc you're using.
I've been reading books, mostly fiction, on my phone as I don't presently have a tablet / ereader. I'd like to move away from reading mostly fiction again, highlighting and note taking and all that, but don't have the gumption to launch a research project in to what's available and what works.
Thanks. And where do your notes and highlights end up?
I have a flat text file that's nearly 1MB in size, that I started 17 years ago! But it's just stored on Dropbox, which is cumbersome to use to search in the file while mobile.
Oh man, I’d never heard of Readwise before but this seems so useful! I love things like highlights and notes on the Kindle, and how words you look up are added to a special list for review later, but I never could figure out a simple way to take advantage of that later. Does Readwise also handle that new word use case? I love expanding my vocabulary and tend to exclusively read on a Kindle.
For us, we're really not that dogmatic about bootstrapping vs VC. VCs are definitely not evil, just optimized for a certain class of business, and probably not in our best interest at our stage.
For another business, VC might be perfect, but in our space we've seen it cause one too many "reading tech" startups to drive off a cliff :)