Show HN: I'm offering consulting for non-technical folks and startups
Inspired by a good friend who did Unstick.me, as well as the recent MVP for 1k project, I've decided to give consulting a shot by offering my services as a developer and product guy to non-technical folks and early-stage web startups who are looking to brainstorm on both the technology and product side, and possibly looking to have an MVP built based on their idea.
I started accepting requests the other day solely with a Wufoo form, and just launched a proper one-page site here: http://youshouldworkwith.me/
Curious to hear feedback on the offer and idea in general. It's the first time I've tried any kind of "alternative" consulting like this.
21 comments
[ 4.1 ms ] story [ 70.7 ms ] threadI've seen my share of product consultants, and they primarily specialize in invoicing. There are some exceptions, of course, but generally the amount of BS/hour is very depressing. The site needs to do a better job to explain that Kyle is not of their kind.
One thing I wonder is if the kind of people that would take up an offer like this have the means to pay for it. As in: do the "idea guys" that can't find technical guys have enough money?
One angle you might want to consider is the sanity check - going over the technical merit of an idea/early stage product/architecture. This could be for both the idea guy and technical guy. A company that is a bit further along would have more cash.
And for those on about the rates: that rate for two hours is not bad.
I'm still trying to figure out the best way to angle this, but my ideal customer is an "idea guy" who does have the means to pay, an interesting idea, and "gets it" with regard to what it actually takes to build a product.
I do like the idea about involving some kind of idea sanity check, though I'm kind of doing that as folks contact me — I'd rather tell them that it's not really a viable idea as is, and spend a little time working through that, vs. take their money for the 2 hours or MVP product just because I can.
That being said: PHP, Ruby, some Python; Mysql, Postgres, Mongo.
You might want to think about some kind of satisfaction guarantee. I for once might have a problem shelling out $400 for a 2h talk with a guy I never worked with without one. I'd actually make it a "money back plus a beer on me" guarantee.
If you had a stackoverflow account I'd definitely link to it; too bad it's not possible with Forrst.
I'd also publish your HN karma. Seriously. A big, automagically updating number, showing that you really are about community, sharing, brainstorming and all that jazz. :)
Anyway, I know that if I'd seen a "karma" number over 1k, I'd be impressed even if I had no idea what it meant.