Sincerely curious as to why most people do this; for me, it’s primarily about lifestyle and money, and while I do want to help solve a problem, let’s face it would anyone do this if there was no money? The primary motivator is money, am I correct?
assisting many individuals in resolving a variety of problems. And money will be the later financial windfall. to repeat the process after that. Salute to capitalism
Pay attention to the inputs, and the results will follow. Pay more attention to the outputs than the inputs.
For me, it’s 25% money and 75% enjoying having side ventures, which are similar to hobbies.
Building a product that helps me live a simpler life is what it means to me. It’s a plus if someone wants to pay for it. It also has to do with the security of having thousands of sources of income rather than just one that may be taken away from me at any time, and the fact that I won’t be dependent on selling my labor and time for money. The lifestyle and money (which I haven’t made yet) are bonuses that might materialize later or never at all.
It’s about pushing the envelope of what I can do and investigating novel concepts that I couldn’t investigate in a traditional career, for me. Of course, I enjoy earning money—who doesn’t?—but the real reward comes from feeling accomplished.
Software development is a meaningful and productive endeavor that boosts human productivity, but in order to be profitable, one must work on projects that the market finds value. If not, it is merely voluntary labor.
You won’t stick with anything long enough to see the benefits if you don’t enjoy the process. Although I truly appreciate fixing people’s problems, I would really love to become extremely wealthy. Receiving our first good Saas and private message evaluations was the happiest feeling in the world.
Cash + Supporting innovative tech entrepreneurs to sell their concepts at saasup.agency