I'm wondering if I should switch careers (maybe to sales/marketing) in order to learn new skills. I don't want to be good only in software development. The cons of switching careers would be that right now I work remotely (so I have time to spend on side projects) and I earn good money (so I can save).
What do you think?
Find and talk to people that have a problem, and come up with the simplest way possible of offering a solution in exchange for money. Ideally the v1 solution doesn’t involve creating any software.
Regardless of what you do you need to be able to cover food, rent etc. Whether that is living with your parents, working as a software dev etc you need some way to survive as you work on your business. Make sure you have that covered.
Find mentors for the areas you are lacking, get their feedback if you can, and learn as you go.
Optimise and prioritise your life for spending as much time as you can on your business. Only work as much as you need to survive, cut out Netflix and other less important things (yes even if it means limiting socialising), and work on your business. Don’t worry about automation or scale until you’ve started making money in your business.
Make progress every day no matter how small, and if you’re serious make adjustments when you need to but never give up.
Good luck!
Coming to making some money, you can use your strength so you don't spend too much time or energy in making money and use rest of time on your project
Yes I ended up working remotely from a suburb where I could buy more land for my experiments and hobbies.
Now I am selling 3d printer filament that I manufacture in my garage lab:
https://medium.com/endless-filament/make-your-filament-at-ho...
I don't know about you but I like experimenting with processes and turning them into something that could be sold and something which people will pay for.
Incoherent Mind dump incoming
Some people want to jump from job to product/own startup.
Personally my risk appetite is low. So I went down the job -> consultant/freelancer -> agency route.
Next step is product but not sure when.
I read many books, watched quite some YouTube channels etc. Tried to improve soft skills.
Conferences travel, trade show advice is correct.
Trying to be closer to customers advice from others is also correct.
Most advice works. But nothing beats real experience.. you can only prep so much.
What I wish I had done better before taking the jump
- build LinkedIn/Twitter/any following audience. - throw myself out there with a blog or something.
The above are two you can do right now.
Find me on LinkedIn. Zubair Lutfullah Kakakhel. Happy to connect and share more thoughts.
Thanks
I am an engineer with no sales training and I’ve learned how to sell (good enough) to get us to the point where we can bring in a real sales team member.
You're 100% right that sales/marketing/growth skills are necessary for building a startup, but I'd offer up two key points:
- Your product is everything, and having a gifted engineer fully bought in to developing the product from the jump is a huge advantage for any startup.
- Running growth for an early stage, 0-to-1 startup is not the same as doing it at a larger company, where you're likely to get a sales/marketing job.
All of this is just my experience, but I think the only way to learn how to grow a new startup is to do it. The biggest advantage you can have in that situation isn't previous experience with sales cycles or PPC advertising, it's the ability to build a great product.
TLDR: Continue to develop as an engineer, learn the business side when you decide to start a business.
I should also add, however, that if you're unhappy as an engineer and that sales/marketing seems attractive, that's a different situation altogether.
This is the first safety net you will be sacrificing if you do the switch. Make sure your decisions are informed enough to make it worth the risk. Good luck.
There is a a lot to learn and it can shift greatly as a company grows.