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Is it hard to build, market and maintain a web app that makes at least $1,000 a month?

JamesSJ

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Spotted this on Quora this morning - well worth a read.

Original post here - http://www.quora.com/Is-it-hard-to-...n-a-web-app-that-makes-at-least-1-000-a-month

One of the best answers i have read to the question

Is it hard to build, market and maintain a web app that makes at least $1,000 a month?

Answer below...
--

This is a very interesting question, and the responses are very revealing. It is instantly clear who knows what they are talking about.

My litmus test for sorting out those who have actually tried to make money online and know what they are talking about is mention of the word "churn." The hard part is not getting to $1000 a month. It is staying there. Actually "staying there" is much harder than either "going beyond" or "falling back to $0" because Web/digital products (unlike say a baker's shop) are fundamentally not stable cash flow generators. They are unstable in either good or bad ways. The only thing worse than having a $1000/mo idea fall back to earth by itself is to watch someone else with more drive taking a clone to $10,000/mo and killing you in the process, because YOU didn't have the drive to run with it. This is a fundamental weakness of lifestyle business ideas. Good ideas have a tendency to quickly break the 4-hour-work-week effort ceiling. Bad ideas fall back to earth.

I've "gotten there" with 2 different products in the last two months. The reason I am not shouting this from the rooftops and trying to sell my "formula" to others is that I haven't yet solved the problem of how to stay there with either product with sufficiently low costs on my side.

Calibrating Expectations

From the question it sounds like the intent is to have a passive stream of income (a common lifestyle business goal). So to qualify as "sufficiently low costs" the ongoing effort should be less than the hours spent at a regular day job to generate $1000/mo. Assuming an $80k entry level s/w developer job for 2000 hours a year (fifty 40 hour weeks), the number to beat is about $40/hour. That's about 25 hours. If you are spending more than 25 hours a month supporting this app, you're losing. Sure you could consider intangibles like building up a market that trusts you for future apps, a brand, having independence from pointy-haired bosses etc., but those come later. The baseline must be beating the lifestyle you could support in immediate cash flow terms, compared to a regular job. Gravy comes later.

$1000 per month in a 100x$10 or 50x$20 configuration sounds simple. It is not. Development work for an average app, given the idea, is not particularly hard engineering, so if all you needed were the engineering chops for it, you should see one out of two engineers quitting their day jobs to do this. Why don't we see that?

It's because the hard part is not the engineering.

How Hard is the Marketing?

Do the math. Whatever your main acquisition channel, after back-calculating "new user impressions" from current subscription rate, you'll likely be left with something like needing a blog or e-newsletter that hits 100 new people a month in order for you to acquire one new user (example: if referrals via your e-newsletter are your main mechanism, and 1 in 10 users forwards your newsletter to someone new, and 1 out of THAT 10 is likely to sign up... you're at a 1% conversion rate. This is VERY optimistic. Search marketing or blog marketing have similar profiles).

If your app hemorrhages existing users at the rate of 20%, you'll need 2000 new users exposed to your pitch in order to replace the users you are losing.

That is a VERY tall order. Since most marketing channels are designed to simultaneously serve acquisition and retention needs, it is easy to let the numbers fool us. We report acquired numbers (subscribers). What's more, the acquisition/retention tradeoff is very hard to manage on a single channel. The more you try to make your marketing appeal to new audiences, the less it will serve retention needs, and cause hemorrhaging.

Maintenance

What about maintenance? Well, even for a non-tech product that relies on 3rd party tech, like my wordpress blog, simply keeping the software and plugins up to date and compliant with the latest releases of related software... that can take a couple of hours a month. What do you think it is going to take to support software YOU wrote? What about random spikes, like an API you rely on being completely rewritten, requiring you to rebuild the whole app? What if a competitor app pops up that does better, forcing you to re-engineer and fight back? Trust me, if there's a market, there will be competition. Even if your app discovers the market, merely the fact of you making a steady $1000 a month will attract hungrier people, willing to do better for less money to take away your market.

There's a lot hiding under "maintenance."

Between managing churn via continuous marketing, and doing frequent updates and maintenance to keep up with technology and the competition, you're easily talking something that takes more than 25 hours a month. More like 40. Or a 25% time commitment. Which brings your hourly rate earnings to $25. And don't think moving to Bali will make that $25 stretch further. Your marketing will grow harder in proportion to your distance from the American market you are serving.

And Oh Yeah, It's Boring

Did I mention that sustained marketing and maintenance are among the most boring types of work, especially for someone who gets kicks from building new stuff?

So since the effort investment is roughly:

marketing >> maintenance >> original engineering

you are talking a very boring 25% job that pays less than a day job for the same skills. (assume each >> to be a a 10x increase.)

In other words, the initial developer's work is the trivial part of it. Marketing and maintenance are the really tough parts.

This explains the most common failure mode: having a good initial product and a great launch month, followed by a flame-out.

So Should You Do It?

After that very cynical analysis, it may surprise you to hear my recommendation. You should STILL do it.

Here's why: something like this is a GAMBLE.

A regular job has a higher guaranteed upside that hits its ceiling very quickly. Even if you beat this scenario 3-4x and are in a job that pays $120-$160/hour, you'll never get off the treadmill, because the treadmill is designed to never let you off. It is Hotel California. If you are making $300k, chances are you are a mission-critical linchpin, and The Man will figure out a pattern of incentives to keep you where you are.

Your app... 90% chances are it will perform as I outlined, even if you do everything right to the best of your abilities. In other words, 90% of the time, you will do (say) 80% as well compared to a regular job with the same effort. So the contribution to a normalized expected value computation would be: 0.9*0.8=0.72.

But there's a 10% chance that you'll hit upon an idea that just hits some market nerve and takes off on a wild trajectory of success, requiring no marketing and escalating inbound demand, and growing so fast that the competition cannot catch up (if you are willing to get off your lazy behind and tighten your grip on the tiger's tail that is; otherwise someone will very kindly take your market away from you).

There is almost NOTHING you can do to make this happen, other than to place as many bets as you can, as frequently as you can, without shortchanging any of the ideas on the effort side.

But if one of the ideas takes off, you're done. Screw the rest of the portfolio. Sell or abandon them. Double down HARD on the one that's taking off. Ride it all the way out of the crappy financial prisons that counts as "life" for most of us.

So it REALLY only comes down to a SINGLE question.

Do you feel lucky, punk?
 
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Vampyre

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This is a brilliant post. I think it covers the hidden truth behind such an idea - which most Wantrepreneurs just don't see.
 

The-J

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Lifestyle businesses should be a stepping stone for something greater, in my opinion, even if that just means scaling up a business that used to serve as a lifestyle business. If you need $1k a month to cover all your expenses, build an app that makes $2k a month then build a business around the problem or market that the app serves.

You'll never have an infinite amount of free time with a lifestyle business OR a 'real' business. That's not how it works. The only way to get to the point where you literally NEVER have to work another day in your life is to make enough money to put into safe yield investments (the 'money system' portfolio that MJ wrote about). You still gotta work. You might even find that your real business that makes more money could actually yield the same amount of free time as your shitty little $1k/mo lifestyle business.
 

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