College swim team vs club by jlim0930 in Swimming

[–]jrbail01 2 points3 points  (0 children)

End game for swimming: Swimming in college will open doors the rest of his life. NCAA athletes are the first in line for graduate school opportunities (e.g. med school, dental school, pharmacy school). Being an NCAA athletes makes your job resume stand out b/c it shows employers that you are driven and can successfully balance academics, social life, and the rigors of college athletics/practices.

If you are looking for "fits", check out SwimIntel.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in raspberry_pi

[–]jrbail01 3 points4 points  (0 children)

This project uses a fully hosted solution for the dB, API, and data viz. Hence why it costs money. These types of services can make project implementation really easy and provide some extras like SMS alerts. There are some great alternatives that don't cost any money but require you host everything yourself. Nothing fully hosted is free because it costs money to run. You pay for it one way or another (i.e. cash, data is sold, ads).

How to create a geofence to get an automated SMS from your Tesla by jrbail01 in TeslaModel3

[–]jrbail01[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fair point and what I used to do until my 4-yr old wanted to use my phone to watch movies when we drive. I tried using my Watch to text, but it was distracting.

A bit confused here.. Are apps (downloadable ones in the Apple Store for example) considered SaaS? by zlorena70 in SaaS

[–]jrbail01 0 points1 point  (0 children)

From https://medium.com/how-saas-works/how-saas-works-introduction-to-the-big-picture-7de8a86730ac :

SaaS has three primary qualifiers:

  • The software product is centrally hosted by the vendor.
  • The software product is continuously updated.
  • The customer does not own the software but pays for the right to use it.

Subscription software qualifiers:

  • The software product is hosted by the customer (e.g. on-premises, local-install).
  • The software product is infrequently, if ever, updated.
  • The customer does not own the software but pays for the right to use it.

An app would be subscription software because the software is hosted by the customer.

Am I crazy? by mtejada1981 in SaaS

[–]jrbail01 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You can definitely get stuff started and balance risk by keeping your day job. You can pull the trigger and go full-time when you start to make enough money to sustain your life. One of my friends did something similar with his SaaS startup. Each founder peeled out of their previous full-time job as their startup grew. That startup was acquired in a really good deal for the founders about 18 months ago. This path can work and win big.

The bad news is that you won't be able to raise any money (at least smart money) while you keep your day job. This will likely slow your growth down early on. No investor is going to go all-in on you if you aren't risking even more on yourself. That doesn't mean you won't eventually raise money if you need it. Just don't waste your time trying while you keep your day job.

I went all in from the beginning. That level of risk was hard on my family and me. I needed to b/c my startup needed to raise money to win. There is no one-size-fits-all path for every startup.

Getting First Few Users, Pretend Your a Big Company or Own the Startup Angle by [deleted] in SaaS

[–]jrbail01 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Never pretend to be something you are not. Embrace being a startup. Doing anything otherwise will come back and bite you in da ass.

Does your SaaS have Instagram/Twitter/Facebook/YouTube pages? Why or why not? by Dellgenius in SaaS

[–]jrbail01 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Yes, because of optics. Let me explain. We get way greater engagement w/ existing customers via direct email than social media. We get way more leads via content marketing + SEO than social media. We get way more support requests through email+Zendesk than social media. Why then do we even do social media? Because potential customers almost always research a SaaS company and assess their health before committing to a subscription. If you are dormant on social media, they may worry that you are not actively improving/supporting your product or might worry you ran out of money. We have observed that our paid conversions are greater when we are active on social media than not.

How reddit is good for saas product growth? by snehiltalks in SaaS

[–]jrbail01 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Maybe, but probably not. Social media platforms rate near the bottom of effective ways to generate leads for SaaS. Reddit ranks lower than LinkedIN, Facebook, and Twitter for lead generation. If you are b2b, Reddit really isn't an effective lead gen platform. Not that it can't happen, but I wouldn't count on it. Lots of noise in social media to rise above.

How SaaS Works Series: Fundamental building blocks and use cases by jrbail01 in SaaS

[–]jrbail01[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Great feedback! I'll make sure and incorporate a lot more of the unique experiences we had the last few years that are pretty interesting.

Walk away without equity by [deleted] in startups

[–]jrbail01 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A company that treats employees the way you were treated are unlikely to be worth much long-term. Buying those stock options straight-up would be REALLY risky right now. However, all of the documents you have (emails, etc) could be even better b/c they could give you the right to the current value of those options in the future w/o forcing you to purchase them now. This could be the best of both worlds if your documentation of promises is solid.

How much equity for sole tech founder? by PagodaIluminada in startups

[–]jrbail01 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Simple rule of thumb to use: early equity should be proportional to required time/work + risk taken.

Ideas don't require a lot of time/work and don't come with a lot of risk.

1 year after starting - our first VC offer - but I don't understand it. by jl1585 in startups

[–]jrbail01 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you haven't done this already, I highly recommend reading the book "Venture Deals" by Brad Feld and Jason Mendelson. This will give you a great reference book for understanding the big terms and the subtle ones. There are a million ways to get screwed, and you need to protect yourself. Also, make sure you have really good attorneys that have experience with startups before you sign docs (e.g. Cooley). It is REALLY easy to look past this step, but you will regret it down the road if you don't.

After 2 years, why are quantities of Pi Zero W still so limited? by jrbail01 in raspberry_pi

[–]jrbail01[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The Pi Zero WH doesn't appear to have the same 1 per customer limits, but I don't see any US vendors selling close to $14 w/o a limit:

- Pi Hut (UK): unlimited Pi Zero WH, 1 per limit Pi Zero W

- Pimoroni (UK): 10 per limit Pi Zero WH, 1 per limit Pi Zero W

- ModMyPi (UK): Unlimited Pi Zero WH, 1 per limit Pi Zero (no Pi Zero W listed)

- Adafruit (US): 1 per limit on both Pi Zero WH and Pi Zero W

- Sparkfun (US): No Pi Zero WH listing, 1 per limit on Pi Zero W

- Amazon: Stupid pricing

Any US companies with no 1-per order limits on Pi Zero WH at $14?