Unemployed? Why Not Start a Software Company? 860
"Every time I see a group of 5-10 self-described 'great but unlucky' IT workers looking for a job, and how their previous company had to lay them off because their former employer had this 'stupid idea' it was to move all the jobs to Elbonia, I have to ask myself -- why don't these guys get together and start a software company. If you don't make these 'mistakes' of outsourcing development to Elbonia, couldn't you compete pretty well?
Best of all if you ever did need to grow, in this job market, you can get highly educated and experience software engineers even more inexpensively than China or India -- I've heard some internships are unpayed these days.:-)
Yes, I am taking my own advice, and trying this, even though I was not unemployed."
The challenge of financing (Score:5, Insightful)
The biggest problem for unemployed software engineers getting together and forming a company is financing. If you're unemployed, you probably don't have a lot of cash around to provide seed capital for your business. If you do scrape together enough seed capital or find an angel investor, you're usually stuck with not drawing a salary and having no health insurance for about a year as you try to ramp up your business. And you're doing all of this for a high risk venture where only 1 in 10 businesses actually succeed.
Nevertheless, I'm building a startup right now, Findory.com [findory.com]. But I wouldn't underestimate the obstacles here. It isn't something that can be done lightly.
Re:The challenge of financing (Score:2, Informative)
This [findory.com] looks like it though.
Bubble burst, or champagne still bubbling? (Score:3, Funny)
Sure one bubble may have burst, but looking at the glass as a whole, the champagne is still sparkling.
(or the beer's still got a nice head of foam)
Re:The challenge of financing (Score:5, Insightful)
We've talking software here, the same stuff that many of you do for free with Linux. You have a computer, you have the skills, your marketing and selling might not be great, but at least one of you will be street smart and presentable enough to talk to customers.
So why do you NEED lots of finance?
Find a niche, find a need, create a demo of a solution and sell it. Deliver and find more of the same.
You can be faster, smarter and cheaper than the competition, and if it doesn't work, it need not cost you much at all.
Its one of the advantages of knowledge based industries - the barriers to entry are skill based, not fixed costs.
Re:The challenge of financing (Score:4, Insightful)
But the biggest challenge is not drawing a salary for a long period of time. Most people don't have enough savings to live for 12 months without any income.
Re:The challenge of financing (Score:5, Informative)
Don't incorporate! There is no reason you need to endure that expense and headache. Plus you're double-taxed: first on corporate income and then when you draw personal income from the corp. Look into forming a Limited Liability Company. Buy a $50 book, fill out a form half the length of 1040EZ and pay the state registeration fee ($50 in Michigan, $125 in Ohio YMMV).
Don't let all the business or legal jargon scare you, it's easy and legally-binding. You'll have to draw up your own Articles of Organization, but once again, it's easy. It's pretty cool because you get to establish your bylaws and you can write it in plain English, not legal speak. There's plenty of examples on the 'net and in books.
Re:The challenge of financing (Score:5, Informative)
Just a little disclaimer however, I am not an accountant, just a business owner. If you are seriously looking into incorporating, speak to an accountant first. Although I highly recommend all contractors incorporating, there are numerous things that you have to keep in mind, and there is overhead, so its best to go into it with eyes open, or you are liable to get screwed for not following the rules.
Re:The challenge of financing (Score:3, Informative)
Re:The challenge of financing (Score:4, Informative)
You're right that business owners who are choosing between the LLC form and the corporation should always consult an accountant, and consulting a lawyer would be good too. Aside from the tax advantages and disadvantages, there are many advantages and disadvantages to the LLC as a legal structure.
Re:The challenge of financing (Score:3, Informative)
And, from what my financial friend told me, while there's double taxation there are also some advantages to certain types of corporation. Basically it involves loop holes with personal compensation and using the company as an entity to lower your taxes. People do it all the time
Re:The challenge of financing (Score:4, Insightful)
If you're one code monkey working out of your apartment, don't bother doing anything more than filling a "Doing Business As" (DBA). It costs like $25 in more areas. Essentially it's like giving yourself another name. All income is reported on your 1040 under your SSN. It's cheap and easy. If things grow, then you can always roll it into a new business entity. WAY too many people overlook this option when they have stars in their eyes.
A C-Corp is a standard corp and S-Corp is like Corporate Lite. It's designed for a small, closely held group of investors. There are some restrictions on what you can and cannot do, who you can offer interest to, etc. Still though, either form is too complex and costly for most people who simply have a good idea and pocket change to work with. I recommend an LLC for a small group of friends and just a sole-proprietorship (the DBA option) for just one guy.
No, I'm not a lawyer but I have done a lot of this stuff and have learned from my mistakes. Don't do a corporation unless you have serious starting capital (what is not what this /. article was about).
Re:The challenge of financing (Score:3, Informative)
Re:The challenge of financing (Score:3, Interesting)
I picture the Korean guy in the town I came from who started his own fresh produce market. Talk about start up costs - a software company can be anywhere, but a market needs to pay for prime real estate (he was on the busiest road in town), and has to pay for all that produce up front. He barely spoke english, but somehow ma
Re:The challenge of financing (Score:5, Insightful)
Without some form of savings/income to draw upon, one can't develop software on their own (Free or not). You don't get a net connection for free. You don't get parts for free. You don't get to live rent free. If you do, you probably didn't need the job you so unluckly lost.
People work for a variety of reasons. Most of them are because they need income to barter for other goods and services.
Software that takes 6 months for one guy to slap together, isn't going to impress anybody who has an IT background. They'll see it's obviously only 6 man months of work... ;-)
Most people I know don't have 6 months worth of income available to them as cash they can easily spend. Getting 6 months of time together while working full time at a job is difficult at best. Especially if you work a time demanding IT job.
Kirby
Re:The challenge of financing (Score:4, Interesting)
Second, I said niche for a a specific reason. Its amazing how often you find small niches with needs that are not met, or poorly met. You can find opportunities where the programming effort required is minimal, but the value to that customer is immense. Nobody is saying you should take on Microsoft - in fact its because you're small that you can successfully address these niches. Your local, you know the problem, you know the culture. You can also target your marketing cheaply.
Worthless ideas (Score:5, Interesting)
That sounds great, but it is worthless. When you are unemployed the state (might differ if you are not in the US) pays you to spend 40 hours a week looking for a job. I know that almost nobody actually spends all 40 hours a week looking for a job, but that is what you should do.
I cannot start a company and remain on unemplyment, it is against the rules. Lookup OddTodd one time, he created a successfull cartoon, and the state wanted to take his unemplyment benifits back, he only won that case because he was able to show that he didn't expect his cartoons (which are funny) to make money. If you start a software company can you really expect me to belive that you do not expect to make money?
Re:The challenge of financing (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The challenge of financing (Score:3, Insightful)
He's not talking about the kernel, or the desktop. He's talking about the stuff we hack together FOR linux. The perl script you spent a weekend on to `insert niche here`. Thats what can be sold (even while keeping it GPL).
"Without some form of savings/income to draw upon, one can't develop software on their own (Free or not). "
True, but thats where the unemployed part
Re:The challenge of financing (Score:3, Funny)
Re:The challenge of financing (Score:5, Funny)
Re:The challenge of financing (Score:4, Interesting)
> just as easily swallow someone else's pride and do gay porn.
Wow, in your mind those two professions are equivalent?
(And I thought *I* was a huge moral relativist...)
The apparent nonexistance of a line between legal and illegal actions should leave you admirably suited to a job in almost any large corporate legal department. Blimey, you're set for life, dude!
Personally, I delivered pizza for 2 years - even while I was earning $75/hr as an at-home programmer. It was a nice break from the keyboard, getting me out of the house on a regular basis, and I got the not-so-occasional free slice - the best kind of pizza is free, after all! So where's the pride-swallowing, I ask you? I'm not begging for change, I'm not representing scumbags in court, I'm not calling people during dinner to sell them siding, and my clothes stay on. It can be dangerous work if you're not in a nice area, but otherwise it's enough to live on and you'd be surprised how many computer-y types I've known through the years who used pizza places as a nice little moonlight position... especially computer techs - I think it's just a nice change of pace to have a job where people are happy to see you!
Re:The challenge of financing (Score:3, Funny)
and now for some more funny:
Personally, I did gay porn for 2 years - even while I was earning $75/hr as an at-home programmer. It was a nice break from the keyboard, getting me out of the house on a regular basis, and I got the not-so-occasional free piece of ass - the best kind of ass is free, after all! So where's the pride-swallowing, I ask you? I'm not begging for change, I'm not representing scumbags in court, I
Re:The challenge of financing (Score:4, Insightful)
Is it glamorous? No. Is it challenging and stimulating? Yes, but necesarilly in a way you'd like. Is it high paying? Not really.
But none of these facts makes it shameful or somehow dehumanizing. In fact one might argue that the refusal to take a job in maunal labor or service (food delivery is both) is shameful. You should never consider yourself too good to take a job, if you are unemployed.
Re:The challenge of financing (Score:4, Interesting)
I'll give you a random example from my own past experience.
Several years ago (like 6-7, I don't even think I'm under an NDA anymore, ancient times really) I worked for a lesser known corporation called Sony Electronics.
I started off at this Sony Electronics place, in Tech Support. I went there expecting they would be interested in knowledgable people. I walked in and they first did a lie detector test for security clearance and drug testing. Then they gave you a technical test, where they would ask you questions and you'd have to describe how to perform various tasks off the top of your head and explain technologies in certain areas etc (architectures you've worked with etc.). Fair enough, after all a customer isn't generally going to call and give you a multiple choice question.
It wasn't long before the interviewer was starting to scribble on the back of the sheet when writting down the processors I'd worked with (3rd question, after name and date of birth) before he simply sat it down and started quizzing me. All of it fairly easy windows stuff (only setback was that he said it was windows 98se and asked about system resources, I started explaining how to get to the system monitor and he got very confused, he wanted the overall rating in system properties).
So I go through the rigerous Sony 1 month training course and another month on the floor. And then I discover the magic which is numbers. That is all sony cares about. My (now wife) worked there with me, she is of a knowledge level where she knows there is this cd command and a vague idea of how it works, if you ask her how to move to the root of the C drive she will advise to type "cd C:".
She didn't know shit, probably fixed about 3 customers problems for real. It's a fair bet that every customer she handled called back 3 or 4 times. Needless to say she was the Star of our entire shift, 94-96% of her time was spent on the phone or available ready for a call to come in. Her average call time was about 6 minutes. If you checked her calls (easy to do) there was ALWAYS a callback but Sony neither noticed nor cared.
Me, I rated about 85% spending alot of my time in unavailable (mostly spent on call documentation), my average call time was more like 15min. I had an average of 5 or 6 kb updates (solutions that were wrong or had no solution in the sony knowledgebase, wife had zero in the year we worked there) a day. If you looked through my calls you would always see almost nobody I worked with had to call back for the same problem and the only reason I escalated a call was because it required a solution that wasn't within my authority (certain types of repairs) and even then I usually walked over and got authorization rather than bumping up the call.
I have several letters in the Sony book (where customers wrote to the president of the company because they were so pleased with my work) and had one customer try to send me home baked chocolate chip cookies (nazi security gorillas examined and proded them for 3 months and finally handed me a bag full of cookie pieces, seriously).
Now with all that, I was at barely acceptable performance and got lectures on my numbers fairly routinely (course they'd never fire me, that takes a 6month process at sony and they wouldn't start it with my star employee girlfriend as part of the package).
My wife is an accountant by trade by the way, and her poor performance as a phone tech really doesn't reflect on her work in the subject she actually knows something about.
In any case, that is an example of the way Corporate America works, I could give you dozens of other examples. It's much like the government, there are rules and guidelines and reality rarely intrudes on the way things work there.
Re:The challenge of financing (Score:5, Insightful)
As someone who's been working on this for the last eighteen months, let me tell you the sad truth: Being faster, better and cheaper... and even first to market... isn't nearly enough. What you'll need is the business deals that your competition already has set up. And they're most likely exclusive.
Why did I say competition if you're first to market? Well, your competition won't offer the product you're working on... but they will have similiar products, and they'll happily tell users and business partners that they're working on a product that'll stomp yours.
It costs a LOT. I'd estimate at least 70% of our costs go towards trying to get business deals, and that's the sort of thing you just can't do cheaply.
Re:The challenge of financing (Score:3, Informative)
You're not kidding. Sales and marketing has been the hardest part of my business, which is about to be four years old. Luckily, I started with a client and was able to sustain that business while I slowly gained others, mostly through word of mouth.
I set up shop [isisnetworks.net] in February 2000, and since then have gone from two business partners to none, re-incorporated once, moved 1200 miles, and changed my core business model several times.
Through it all, the only sure way to get business was word of mouth advertis
Re:The challenge of financing (Score:5, Informative)
Re:The challenge of financing (Score:5, Insightful)
You need a product that can justify costs of a few k per item. You are not in the Microsoft game, you are in the niche game. Value to a specific niche is what you are looking for. Value sufficient to justify the costs you will charge, and small enough that the big boys aren't interested.
So:
Re:The challenge of financing (Score:3, Informative)
The problem with many people is that they start a business like you explained it. There's no reason to get a secretary when you have 0 customers, instead get a cell phone. The first thing to do is get a customer. Use your da
Re:The challenge of financing (Score:3, Insightful)
It took me a few years of work to realize this, but sales and marketing are probably the most powerful force a company can have. Yes, you need the tech folks to create products to sell, but a good sales/marketing force can help make a huge difference. How many stories do we have of "X technology was much better than Y technol
Re:The challenge of financing (Score:3, Insightful)
I'd mod you insightful, (and I hope someone does) but you missed a really crucial part: an actual business plan.
It's true that without sales and marketing, nobody will know about your kick-ass product. Marketing is important, not least because the sales force can report back what the customer really wants. But, having worked at a few tech startups, let me say this: you can have cool technology, you can have a good sales force, but if you don't have any kind of road map for how you're
Re:The challenge of financing (Score:4, Insightful)
He's talking about creating a job. Is your reputation so bad that you won't hire yourself? Anybody I know that is serious about programming owns a PC. All of them have compilers too. And if they didn't there are free compilers, either OS or previous versions of commercial compilers.
So you need three things; time (unemployed, you have plenty), a marketable idea (a little more difficult, but there are so many BAD programs out there than need replaced, not even counting processes where software doesn't even exist), and someone to sell it. The last being the hardest part.
I have a friend that is always telling me "I need to learn more about this or that so I can get a programming job". Let's see, he needed; better understanding of OOP, web services, XML, SQL.... So I gave him a project to write that addressed all of them. Since I have seen nothing in 4 months, I'm assuming he really doesn't want to program.
I turn down several consulting jobs a year because I like the security of a stable paycheck. I don't have time to do my job and consult. So my experience is that there is work out there. If you know anyone who owns a small business, they can probably tell you how some software that doesn't exist could benefit their company. And unless they have some really odd business, there are probably 1000 other small companies doing the same thing they are. Niche markets can be profitable for a small group of programmers.
Re:The challenge of financing (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The challenge of spelling (Score:4, Insightful)
Don't beleive me? Take a look at the papers and articles of those with the ideas, those that have actually advanced knowledge. There is NO correlation between the ability to write well and the ability to think well.
We are all put together differently, with different skills and mindsets. You often find those that excel in one area will suffer in others.
I used to have teachers like you, and I'm damn glad that there were others to support me and recognise just how dumb such theories were.
In the end I got to the stage where I could string sentences together tolerably well, and make only a few mistakes.
Somehow it never stopped me making patentable advances and being a world leader in a niche technology field.
Funny that.
Re:The challenge of financing (Score:3, Insightful)
Most programmers make poor business people. It's a totally different mind set. It's not just about making the next killer app, it's being able to effectively market and sell that app in such a way that you are producing a net profit.
You also have to be able to set reasonable deadlines for yourself and stick to
Why should you need financing? (Score:5, Insightful)
- don't get an office. They cost money. Work From Home. If you have multiple people, either work remotely and meeting irl a few times a week, or choose one central house/apartment and setup shop in a room there. Basements are fine, so are spare bedrooms.
- Use existing hardware.
- Get dirt cheap hosting and put up a good looking website. customers won't know you're only paying 5$ a month for the site.
- don't pay yourselves salaries - I've seen way to many people think 'I need X amount of cash to pay myself Y per week for six months until the business is making money'. Plan on paying yourself what you can, and using unemployment as a cushion until things take off.
Heres how it works: while on unemployment, come up with an idea for a type of software business, and then throw up a website (make sure it looks good), and start writing software. You have to keep looking for a real job, but as long as you aren't making money on the biz, you don't have any income to report, and still get unemployment. If you want to sell products, write them while still on unemployment. If you want to do consulting or custom work, be finding clients while on unemployment. If you are small enough, and have learned to be lean, then your first customers will pay enough that you drop off unemployment and go from there. If not, then divy up the money, pay for expenses, etc (The biz can pay you back for the web hosting, for example), then pay yourself. You Can make money while on unemployment, as long as it's not much - they will reduce how much you get from unemployment in a near 1:1 ratio.
If you do good, you may find yourself off unemployment and making better-than-unemployment wages within a month or two.
You may fail, miserably, but with a cost-of-entry of a few dollars a month and your time, it won't cost you much to fail. If you aren't on unemployment anymore - say if it ran out - then find a job somewhere else to tide you over while you try to get the business going. After all, a 8$/hr job at a bookstore is a lot more money than 0$/hr.
Also remember that starting a business is Not for everyone - many people want the security of a known salary, and don't like the idea of taking risks. Others don't want to work long hours, especialy on something so risky. Ask yourself if you are one of those people.
Me, I've been lucky, and perhaps that has skewed my perceptions. My friend and I were discussing starting our own company, and then a client fell into our lap... a client that by themselves paid our bills and allowed us to grow the business for 6 months. Of course, now we're looking for more clients, since things are slow, but thats the nature of owning your own biz - risk.
neurokode.com - yup, thats me and my partner, and yes, it needs work - we've been too busy to touch it much. Need contract development, or a code audit? Contact us. Want tools for DB development with python? Check out pdo.neurokode.com
Re:Why should you need financing? (Score:4, Informative)
Along the way she occasionally runs into someone who runs a business and needs hosting. We have been snapping up a few small $5-$10/month clients, and also host a few non-profits who needed some server-side scripting stuff at around $30. At this point our DSL line into the house is paying for itself.
My plan is to keep adding small mom and pop enterprises until it starts to rival what I'm making during at my day job.
The key is that we have that social in. We aren't Sach's, and we aren't Walmart. We are that nice young couple who Estelle recommended to use who teaches computers, and hosts internet sites, and they are oh so good at explaining to the tech support line about what isn't working with the computer.
We have yet to advertise. Our customers tell all their friends about us.
It all started with sending my wife over to give the former CEO of our organization a few computer lessons. Next thing we know, she told a few friends who after she dropped by told a few friends...
Market interfaces.... (Score:5, Insightful)
I'll tell you that a number of folks are doing quite well at the interface between biotech and software. The amount of data that is being generated by biotech is truly mind boggling and we need software tools for analysis and visualization of that data. Software that is capable of analyzing multi-dimensional datasets is particularly in demand right now with gene chip analysis and the work we do in our lab on molecular phenotyping. For instance, we [utah.edu] are adopting software used in the remote sensing community to analyze "multispectral" data sets in the retina and other tissues and the communities that this software came from (GIS, Remote sensing, Intelligence) are very interested in software that can help distill multispectral data real time to enable streamlined processing and analysis. Your link to DARPA [darpa.mil] is particularly informative for these potential projects, but don't forget about other resources as well like the National Institutes of Health [nih.gov].
Re:Market interfaces.... (Score:5, Interesting)
Interesting site can be found here [yet2.com].
Re:Market interfaces.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Start a company? (Score:5, Funny)
Yes, but which coder works while the other 9 (Score:2, Funny)
uuuuh. did you think about this? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:uuuuh. did you think about this? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:uuuuh. did you think about this? (Score:4, Insightful)
This can only go so far, eventually some of those software companies have to sell to someone else, or we're in a big circle and going down fast. Software companies that hire REAL coders (who, for example, know what a "stack frame" is, I'm not talking about code monkeys) and do software projects for people in other markets still have the potential for success.
Are V.C.s likely to fund your new company which aims to sell yet ANOTHER content management system or source code revision system or
Re:uuuuh. did you think about this? (Score:2)
Was: General telecom, ISPs, general IT networking mantainance
Now: Biotech, hospitals, record keeping, transactional da
You need to have somtheing to create... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:You need to have somtheing to create... (Score:3, Insightful)
They're still waiting for a $200,000-per-year-with-stock-options gig writing FORTRAN routines to create amortization tables.
If you really want it, work is easy to find.
Start a Software Company (Score:5, Funny)
slashdot problem (Score:5, Funny)
Personal experience (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Personal experience (Score:2, Funny)
I am a hardcore Linux admin, have been using Slackware, Linux From Scratch, and Gentwo all on the same box with unlimited uptime, one user, and a 0.0,0.0,0.0 load average for over 10 years.
I know all about security, adminsitration, and bourne shells. I refuse to work on Windoze boxen because they get virii and are evil monoploists with no understanding of personal comittment fortitude, or wht I can afford living in my mom's basement.
So you are lying, and the IT market is hard for us
Re:Personal experience (Score:3, Insightful)
What I find is that good IT and "employable" are two different things. Companies seem to prefer bullshit artists who do hit-and-run short-term thinking and coding. If they make sacrifices in code and design quality to meet deadlines, nobody ever seems to complain. Cleaning up or patching over their own cruft is job security for them.
The good BS artist has an advantage because nobody has the time or ability
I did this. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:I did this. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:I did this. (Score:4, Insightful)
Been there... (Score:5, Insightful)
My best advise is to start a small software company while still employed. Don't advertise too much, and listen to what your customers have to say. If you keep constant development going, you should have an excellent product prepped for the next time you're out of work (or to start off on your own).
Re:Been there... (Score:3, Insightful)
Remember, never take business advise (sic) from somebody without talking to a lawyer first. IANAL, but...
If you're doing anything even similar to software development for your current employer, don't be surprised when they fire you and take you to court seeking ownership of the software product you developed for your own company. If you're bound by a non-compete clause, they'll try to get you with that; if you're not, they'll try
Re:Been there... (Score:3, Insightful)
This is true. I was assuming a software product that has little to no relation to your current job. Developing something similar to your employer may not always be illegal, but it is unethical.
unemployed? just get a job! (Score:5, Insightful)
Where do you think the money comes from when you start a company? That's right, investors. Now, if you can't find a job, what the hell makes you think that you're going to be able to find investors?
"Hmmm. You've been looking for a job for the past year. Unsuccessfully. You have no experience running a company. You don't have a clear business plan. You have no leadership skills. Well, what have I got to lose? Here's ten million dollars. Have fun!"
Re:unemployed? just get a job! (Score:2)
Many companies come to mind that made it without trying to convince some stranger to loan them a bunch of money before they've proven themselves in what they do... some that might be familiar: apple, microsoft, dell...
Traditional thinking tells you you need some hefty investment to make something work, where a
... Investor money for what? (Score:5, Interesting)
What do you need investor money for? You own a PC, or you wouldn't be on slashdot... Compilers are a dime a dozen... The biggest expense for many companies is R&D... It's not like you have to stop looking for a job while you're coding - you keep your skills current... The cost to enter the software development business is pretty much nil for someone who isn't working...
I guess before there were investors, there were no companies, and all companies have required investor money to get going...
Those of you interested should check out the Association of Shareware Professionals [asp-shareware.org] ... Lots of good info here...
Re:... Investor money for what? (Score:3, Insightful)
i don't have a lot to say on this... (Score:2)
Yes, I am taking my own advice, and trying this, even though I was not unemployed."
Good luck to ya. From what I see, smart individuals with the willpower to stick it out, and some selling ability, will do fine doing this... even in this economy. So more power to ya!
I'm available (Score:3, Funny)
-Ab
Umemployed? Why not start a software company? (Score:2, Funny)
unpaid internships (Score:3, Interesting)
Yes, how do companies get away with this? If the internship is part of a college degree/coursework then that is one thing, since you get course credit. However, unpaid labor? Aren't there labor laws? I hear a lot of the movie industry uses unpaid internships because people, apparently rich kids, really want to be in the movie industry and can afford to use ma & pa's bank account to float their boats for a while until they move up to a real job.
Can you waive your rights that are protected under labor laws? Is that what these "unpaid internships" have you do by signing a contract? Whatever happened to minimum wage laws?
I do realize that back in the olden days, apprenticeships were used regularly. But even these, didn't they offer housing and food in return for work?
someone please enlighten me.
Re:unpaid internships (Score:4, Insightful)
At most other shops, interns are paid, allright, mostly to make coffee and do the tasks no one wants to do. And it's OK that they get money for that.
At our company, interns receive a personal training plan and are basically treated like students. The employees are encouraged to spend lots of time with them, teaching them what they know. Our interns work on real projects, and are getting real experience with their desired field of work. This costs the company a bunch of money, because time and resources are diverted to implement these training plans.
So, no, we're not paying them additional money but when they leave (and some get assimilated by us), they know a whole lot more about their future jobs. Getting this knowledge across basically costs us money that - let's face it - we're never getting back in any way. It's true, an intern also produces stuff during her stay, but the value of that doesn't compare at all.
Sure we are (Score:5, Interesting)
I mean, every unemployed software developer I know still freelance codes to make ends meet (at least once unemployment runs out).
But making ends meet and having a strong business where you're honestly "getting ahead in the world" are two very distinct things. Of all the people I know trying this, few were able to come up with more than $10,000 over the last 12 months, and some of us considerably less than that.
Finding paying customers for software isn't easy (at least those willing to pay what the software is worth). I often go 3-4 weeks without anything profitable to do... and get called by someone who wants a 20-30 hour job to cost them like $50.
It's not because of lack of great ideas (Score:5, Insightful)
The company I am working for I didn't join because of their great ideas. Though what we are building is very cool. It was the fact that the CEO and President are both Ernst and Young alumni, and two of our Board of Directors have significant experience in the industry we are building it for. On top of that, they have a rock solid business plan that I was very impressed with, and know what's important to spend money on (legal, dev workstations, software licenses) and what not to (not working off of a yacht yet).
Add to that what an earlier poster said about financing and you have the mix to keep most people from starting or suceeding at this. Show me software developers who know how to create a good financial plan, can prove a track record of delivering software, and know the industry they are building for, and I bet very few of them are unemployed.
I have tried multiple times (Score:5, Interesting)
Mindset (Score:2, Insightful)
Also, software company is about having an idea that would make for a good software. When hunger strikes and you are driving down a freeway, you are not looking for a gourmet restaurant. Any fast food j
Fund your development with services (Score:4, Interesting)
I've seen self-employment work best as a service business. Can you do networking and software support? Do you think these jobs are beneath you? Do you have skills in dealing with customers? You know software development inevitably turns into support in successful projects?
Support pays the bills and generates the cash flow needed to fund you development efforts. The problem is most developers think they're going to develop a successful product and let someone else worry about the support problems. Never happens. Might as well bite the support bullet now. You will find it is not beneath you. It is hard even for the technically skilled. It will pays the bills and give you the time for pure development.
Business plan (Score:5, Informative)
Beware of angel-investors (people who know you and are willing to give you cash to start up). Unless you have a better experience than most (myself included), you'll fall out, and it'll get messy. I wasted 3 years.
Do a *realistic* assessment of your income and needs. Before you jump ship or give up something else, make sure you can support yourself. Sounds stupid, but it's amazing how little costs can add up. It's easy to fall afoul of the law with tax returns and VAT as well (for us Europeans)...
Get people on board who can run a company - not as paid (or maybe nominally paid) - someone who's outside the business most of the time, and isn't fixated on the next quarter, because you will be, and you'll need a longer-term plan as well as the short-term survival strategy. Make them a non-exec director.
That's about all. The business plan *is* the most important, believe it or not... Most banks will help you through it for free (hoping to get your business). At the very least they'll give some sound advice. It's their job to fund businesses that work....
We've [saltsw.com] been going for 2.5 years now, and learnt the hard way (the aforementioned 3 years) that there's more to doing this than meets the eye...
On the other hand, if you can handle the extra pressure of being both boss and worker, it's a far nicer lifestyle than being a cog in the engine
Simon.
The experienced can get jobs. (Score:3, Interesting)
The unemployed are most likely comprised primarily of those MANY people who are either IT people who without a huge portfolio or over 5 years of experience, CS people who haven't graduated, or have less than 3 years recognizeable experience. It's hard to push through phone networks to speak to people who would ordinarilly throw away your resume, and it's very hard to get acceptable experience in this market. Without experience, and without the money that comes with it, it's VERY hard to start a business that other businesses would give regular business to. The experienced people can still find jobs.
It's that span between "cheap high school/early college labor" and "unquestionably valuable asset" that gets people in this market.
On that note - Anyone interested in a CS Major with around 3 years professional experience? [whilezero.com] - I'm friendly, helpful, quick of mind, and have paid my dues.
Ryan Fenton
Pay your employees (Score:2)
A little over a year ago, my current boss and the owner of the company were unemployed. So they decided to start up a company specializing in web development for indie artists and indie labels - help them produce a web presence basically.
They hired me and one other unemployed web developer. But the owner refused to take the time to apply for small business loans, finance the company properly, the list goes on - Essentially, over a year after the company got started, me and the other developer are making $
Same reason I didn't (Score:5, Insightful)
I'll give you the same answer a friend of mine gave when he and I were quitting a consulting company about the same time and someone asked why we didn't start our own.
I don't know anybody who's good at sales whom I trust.
Start a software company, stop writing software! (Score:2)
You need a lawyer, accountant and a CEO to manage the whole mess and THEN you can hire programmers (or yourself) to actually start writing.
Code or Manage. Pick ONE.
Look for the lowest overhead... (Score:2)
Check out Happy Kitchen Games [happykitchengames.com] for more information.
Still won't get venture capital (Score:2)
Has anyone else heard of this practice?
That being said, you're probably better off writing some development tools and selling support contracts to your old buddies who still have jobs. Software dev house
Regarding the poster suggested (Score:4, Insightful)
These are alot harder than you think.
1. There are alot of companies with deep pockets going for it.
2. You will spend a huge time writing proposals down to accounting to the cent before you get into what IT guys would want to do. PHB type of things. And you are not guarenteed you will get the job or get paid for that work.
3. The amount of waiting for things to go through would destroy a business with no income.
4. I can almost guarentee you that a bunch of unemployeed slashdot readers will not qualify for these types of jobs either finacially or with experience contracting with the government.
Re:Regarding the poster suggested (Score:3, Insightful)
99% persipiration, 1% inspiration. (Score:3, Interesting)
It is more like this: 30% pure luck
30% Financing
30% Perspiration
9% favorable government laws/rules
1% Inspiration/talent
But it is clear that talent/genius/great guys get nothing. The people that make it in the real business world have a bit of luck, find some financing, work their asses off in the early years, get a some favorable government rules, and might have a passably good idea.
Bill gates is practically the posterboy for this formula. He had the luck, the cash, some hard work in the early years, a lot of favorabel USA rulings, and a very very few ideas taht weren't 1/2 bad.
Re:99% persipiration, 1% inspiration. (Score:3, Insightful)
To quote, poorly, from the movie:
"Why do you keep on thinking it's luck? Why do you think the same 4 guys end up in the final round every year at the World Series of Poker?
I wouldn't say Bill Gates got lucky but I'd say he bet on a high probability event. He knew computers were going to get big and he knew they could exist in the consumer space so that's where he bet his money.
It's the same with Warren Buffett. He adjusts his portf
I am trying to... (Score:5, Interesting)
Here are the reasons why felt absolutely compelled to start a company:
Working on it... (Score:3, Interesting)
The hard part of getting off the ground is that there's just me coding for the most part - he will help when he's got an idea and some time, but any code reaching production usage has to go through me before I put it on my servers. It's awfully tough finding programmers that will work for free like I essentially do in the investment that the company will be successful and yield a paying job. And since I don't have much help, we're limited to how fast we can grow. Working with the pretty fast-paced music industry clients means that development speed is very important, but we can barely keep up.
The best advice I can give anyone is to work on creating one product that is solid, then work on another product. Try not to spread too thin over too big a project or too many projects. Once you complete a project, only go back for bugfixes or to fork it into a new revision when you're ready for a new version and featureset.
It's not easy and if not for my fiance, an engineer with a good reliable engineer's salary, I wouldn't be able to afford working only this job, which is already taxing my credit cards too heavily and my stress levels can only take so much of the 24x7x365 on call status.
-N
What do you do if you... (Score:3, Interesting)
Have 'support' skills, not 'creative' skills? Seriously, what can an unemployed LAN admin offer to start a new company?
A programmer can make a whizbang new application and sell that; an administrator needs an existing application to require his skills. In addition, IT support techs can't start a new company all that easily because everyone else already has...
doing just that (Score:5, Informative)
1) server colocated in datacenter with back-up dial-in line $300/mo + $2000/server
2) SSL cert, web site marketing costs, etc. $500/yr
3) answering service, mail box, fax service $600/yr
4) cell phone & DSL at home $100/mo
5) incorporation, filings, fees, business liability insurance, registered agaent $2000/yr
6) business checking account $500/open
7) software, $0. all open source
So the company costs me an upfront ~$5000 and $400/month after that for a grand total of ~$10k for the first year.
Personal expenses:
rent/mortgage, utilities, taxes, maintenance, etc.
car payment, gas, insurance, parking, maintenance
debt (credit cards, student loans, etc.)
food, clothes, fun money, living
insurance (health, dental, death, disability, etc.) (~$200/mo for individual health)
savings & retirement etc.
My personal expenses after cutting out A LOT of fat are $4000/month for a grand total of $48,000 for the first year. after taxes.
I have 12 hours a day 6 days a week for 50 weeks a year, burstable to 18/7 for short stretches. When you are responsible for everything you cant burn yourself out.
So you look at your resources, your overhead, do the math and figure out if its feasible.
This is completely ignoring the fact that most engineers make for very poor salesmen, financial planners, marketers, and strategists. Which are as essential to a business as good technology or product.
Re:doing just that (Score:3, Insightful)
You ought to be able to cut that back some more. Try getting rid of your car and moving to a cheap apartment near public transit. A car (gas, maintenance, and insurance) is probably your second-largest (after rent/mortgage) or largest expense. Unlike mortgage payments, car payments don't even build equity for you.
I am one of the lowest of the low, one of the so-called serfs
What sort of company ? (Score:3, Informative)
Earlier posters have already pointed out that you need either a business plan or a product to get a company started (not to mention some source of funding).
Another type of company that I've contemplated starting is a specialist in an area. For example, any sort of networking project, or any sort of database administration work... Guns for hire, in other words. You go in, do a specialized install, get a maintenance contract, and you're done. Some system administrators may require training courses in specialized server software.. you handle those.
Basically, you have two ways to go. You can either be a product oriented company, and try to push as many of your product out into the marketplace, or you can be service oriented, and take it project by project. Each has a set of pros and cons..
Product oriented means you need deep pockets at the start, and a lot of faith. You may be coding without a client for ages, while you build a product that works. These companies are a lot more stable in rough times, once they get a few clients, but breaking even is a huge task, because they have so much invested in a product (which may sink in the marketplace).
Service or contract or even project oriented companies are easier to start up. Here, funding is less of a problem but you need solid contacts to give you projects at the start. Your margins are driven solely by how well you can deliver and close out the individual project.
In either case, you're looking at a lot more work than you would encounter being a wage slave. It takes a lot of different skills (you need to be savvy with business, have a head for numbers, worry about your presentation, and like Napoleon asked of his generals, "you need luck"). Once I sat down and figured out all this (and had friends tell me pieces), I realized that I might be able to handle the technical aspect, but definitely wouldn't have a clue handling a business. So, for now.. my plans are on hold.
Personally, I think people who start companies and have an entrepreneurial streak generally have a pretty good idea and aren't doing it just because they can't find a job..
Working well enough for me... (Score:5, Interesting)
I design/write/sell software for Palm OS, and for what it's worth, PDA's and embedded devices are a *great* opportunity for small developers now - the size and expectations are low enough so that one programmer in a couple of months can create a top-tier PDA product. The only problem is that the programming tends to be a more frustrating than for Windows - Palm OS in particular can be very perplexing for someone who isn't familiar with event loops and 80's style application coding, and even Pocket PC is fraught with weird compatibility issues. And the development tools for both platforms kind of suck. I'm not exactly a brilliant programmer, though, so it's more a question of patience than anything else, and if you've got the stomach for it it can be quite rewarding.
Really it all boils down to ideas; the key to early success as an independent software developer is making something that's sufficiently innovative/exciting that your customers will basically sell it for you, because even with Google et al big advertising campaigns are still the domain of big companies. One great way to get started is to find a small niche market with few competitors, create a well-polished new product for it with some innovative ideas, and back it up with a friendly attitude and impeccable support - at $99 a pop you can make a perfectly decent living with a few dozen orders a month.
Commit (Score:4, Insightful)
For instance, one big problem we had was determining how much we should spend on marketing. We thought it best to go on a situation by sitaution basis as we encountered them and to determine, at each time, whether marketing ventures were worth it. I think this was a big mistake.
What we should've done was determined how much it would've cost to start a business BEFORE we set out for it. Even a rough figure will be good enough to prepare everyone to how much they are going to be committing financially to a company. I would then recommend amassing this money and then setting out on your venture.
This way you can set a budget for costs such as marketing. When you send out an ad campaign for $500 or $1000 you won't be thinking about how much of that comes out of your own pocket but you'll be thinking like a real business like how much of your total marketing budget that is, whether it was worth it and whether you want to spend it again. If you pull it out of pocket right then you'll always be stingy because you have no real solid metric to evaluate costs.
Finally, putting your money on the line from the beginning (whether it's $1000 or $10000) makes you try a lot harder.
Insulting (Score:4, Insightful)
What you may not realize (Score:3, Insightful)
Now, OSS models change this equations. because most software (unless you are doing a lot of custom stuff) has to be number one or two to survive. So companies spend a lot of money on marketing and discount the software to try and "tip" the market to a point of increasing return for there product. Open software does not require this expense and in a way almost guarantees that your software will begin to build a critical mass (if it does not you are barking up the wrong tree)
Times have changed, people have changed (Score:5, Interesting)
The truth is, even if you had a good application to address, whether you could write a viable piece of software that was marketable is an entirely different matter. Even if you get to that point where you have a good market, and a good product, it's only then that the real tough work begins...
I "accidently" started a software company many years ago when I wrote utilities to help clients in my computer consulting business. The products turned out to be so useful that everyone suggested I start selling them, which I eventually did. It took me almost three years, living in a crappy 1BR apartment that didn't even have working plumbing, making some months, not enough money to pay the rent, but eventually word got out and my product received Editor's Choice in PC Mag. Ok, now I've made it? No. Another problem -- distribution. Even though I had the best product in its market, my competition was in bed with the 1-2 major distributors and put pressure on them to not carry my product. I was in a catch-22 as I couldn't afford to spend money on advertising unless I had distribution, but the distributors wouldn't carry my product unless I was advertising, but I didn't want to put a $20k+ ad in PC Magazine (the major pub at the time) when the product wasn't on store shelves. Eventually we picked up distribution, but it was through a lot of hard work, travelling around doing promotions, exhibiting at Comdex (which at the time was an uber-expensive mafia setup where you'd pay a fortune for a crappy location and then find out when you arrive IG moved your both to the middle of nowhere). I won't even go into the nightmares of trying to deal with venture capital firms -- let's just say I'm still on medication from the rash those people gave us.
Before Windows, the economics of the industry was bad enough. Now it's even worse. You don't have to worry about distribution; you have to worry about some other company with more resources and a desire to envelop every market they can copying your product or bundling it with their existing products and destroying your market. Whereas a great product would eventually be found out, nowadays, most of the industry is hype/advertising driven and those with the most resources, not the best product, rule.
That's not to say it can't be done. But starting a successful software company has more to do with having a realistic idea of exactly what you need to do, and a *tremendous* amount of perserverance. There are lots of shortcuts you can take to offload responsibilities to exploitive partners and publishing companies, but you might as well get a 9-to-5 if you do that because you'll end up getting taken advantage of and losing control of your work.
Unemployed? Make money through Gnome! (Score:5, Informative)
Make money through the Gnome Bounty Hunt:
http://www.gnome.org/bounties/ [gnome.org]
Wasn't Laid Off....I Quit (Score:4, Interesting)
Personally, I don't see what all the whining is about ("waah! my boss fired me to offshore his work to india!"). I've experienced offshoring code first hand on two seperate projects and both times, niether of them understood what was requested. And several tens of thousands of dollars later, they were canned. I find it rather easy to convince people that offshoring is one of the biggest wastes of time and money, and becuase of that, I found it rather easy to go on my own.
I'm hardly what you'd call a people person, but the contracts still keep rolling in. And although I'm currently making less than I was full-time, I'm the happiest I've ever been....I make my own hours, I program in whatever language I want, and I set my own wage. And now I have time to do a morning exercise, to try to lose all this weight I gained working in a cube for 3 years.
Open Source as an Inexpensive First Step (Score:5, Interesting)
If you release you code under the GPL, there is nothing to stop you (as the copyright holder) from re-releasing the code under a more commercial license if your open source project is popular or you find a market for it.
Starting your project off as open source is a great idea. Even if it does not take off, your code is out there and other people (and future employers) can see what your programming ability is like without having to take your word for it.
It certainly works for me. I have two project on SourceForge that helped me land two $100k+ jobs.
The only way to start a successful business... (Score:3, Insightful)
I have observed, from closeby, many people starting their own software business in the last few years. The ones that survived were the ones that had a client from the outset.
You can build something you like and/or you think is useful, and then try to sell it. That doesn't work. Most likely no-one is interested, or only interested in your product if it is changed considerably. Moreover, if you have an "off-the-shelf" product, people don't want to pay a lot for it.
Get a client, and build what that client likes. This brings in money. Make sure you take into account that on average you work 20 paid hours per week, no more. The rest is needed for time between jobs and for finding new clients.
You will still be cheaper than the big guys, so you may be able to sell yourself. Especially since renting someone from a big guy is as likely to get you a cheat as a good developer, while you, obviously, are a certified good developer.
In the past when I did odd jobs I usually offered a "no cure no pay" scheme, if it wasn't a very big job. Clients are willing to pay more for such a scheme, and as long as you know you will succeed, no harm done (just make sure you define the "cure" conditions).
If there is any time remaining, build your brilliant general solution and try to market it.
There are several good books available on writing and marketing software as a small business. Find one and read it. It will help you avoid the greatest pitfalls. I learned a lot from Hudgik's "Writing and Marketing Shareware". It's fairly old but contains lots of good advice.
Up to my ears in startups (Score:3, Interesting)
In once case, one of the partners decided to try to take my code and run off with it. After that got sorted out, we spent several months waiting for another of the partners to crank out his part of the project. Right now, we're scrambling for beta testers.
On another project, I've been the bad partner. The bulk of the coding is my responsibility, but I keep finding more things that the project needs. Mostly, they're waiting on my designs to settle out so they can work on their chunks.
And then there's the issue of how to split the ownerhsip of the company once you actually start the company. Most people get the bright idea that you should automatically split the company equally among all contributors. This means that the guy who designs and writes the bulk of the code winds up with the same percentage as the guy who designed a few icons for the web site. Deciding how much each person's contribution is worth is more than a little taxing on the business relationships.
To this date, I've been working on those startups for over a year, and am still waiting for them to pay off. Maybe they will, maybe they won't, but it isn't due to a lack in my effort.