Ask HN: Laid-off product teams – why not build something together?
With the Amazon layoffs, a lot of strong PMs, designers, and engineers are suddenly free (unless you are on visa). Instead of job hunting alone, why not form small teams to build and launch samething?
9 comments
[ 0.26 ms ] story [ 30.8 ms ] threadI think it's a partially mentality and a skillset mismatch between corporate and start ups
Besides anyone can build a product. The hard part is obtaining customers. Too many people especially on HN seem to suffer from survivorship bias not realizing that nine out of 10 out right fail and many of the “successful” ones end up having a lot lower returns than someone can make as an entry level developer in a second tier city.
On the other hand, I’ve been on the interviewer side of the table enough times at smaller companies and software developers who have spent their careers in BigTech often don’t have the skillset we need and wouldn’t know what to do with an empty AWS account and new repository.
I did my stint at AWS ProServe from 2020-2023.
A few observations from this journey:
1. The hardest part isn't building—it's finding the discipline to ship something "good enough" rather than perfect. Corporate trained me to over-polish.
2. Distribution is BRUTAL. You can build something genuinely useful, but without an audience or marketing chops, you're shouting into the void. I'm learning this the hard way.
3. The skillset mismatch is real. Big tech teaches you to work within massive systems with established users. Indie building is the opposite—you're creating systems AND finding users simultaneously.
For those considering this: Start building in public NOW. The audience you build while employed becomes your launchpad when you go solo.
Curious—for those who've done Product Hunt launches: what actually worked for you? I'm seeing so much conflicting advice about timing, pre-launch strategies, etc.
The problem is that being unemployed and having no income puts you in a bad position to build something of value.
Another problem is that job hunting is very time intensive, even more so than a full time job.
A better alternative, at least for me, has been to go all in on finding the next job first and only then start working on building something.