Starting my online dream, how should i resource the back and front end development?

34 replies
TLDR: Spending lifesavings starting dream dating site, want the front end to look professional, have been advised to create custom site and not use white label. Should I :

outsource entire project to freelancer?

Outsource template and backend separately on freelancer?

What language should I use for DB?Backend?Template?Scripting?

THANK YOU!!!

Hey Everyone!

Ive been dreaming of creating a passive online income since I was 18 ( 6 years now), I dream of making a stable $4000 a month so I can leave my 9 to 5 and start living life, travel, help people and work on the projects ive dreamed of needing nothing but an internet connection to manage my business.

All these years I've had idea after idea, I'd do some analysis and research then id poke holes in my own ideas and back out. When I worked myself up to pushing through id procrastinate, things that should take days would take months, then life would wash those ideas away. But I'm done with that, im done with waiting, with fear and watching life go by. Don't get me wrong ive got a good career which I'm thankful for and pays well, but I don't see this as a life working another 40 years in the corporate world. I've amassed a decent amount of savings over my life, $30,000, and I'm putting it all on the line to try and make my dreams come true. No backing out!



I've decided to start a dating site catered for a certain niche, let's say people who play the guitar(it's not), I believe it's an untapped market of around 50 million . There are currently 3 sites catering for this niche, they suffer from:

-fake profiles

-bad UI

-paid communication only

The No.1 among them has around 300,000 active members according to my estimates, I know that sites owner is not a guitar player themselves and has a very poor understanding of the guitar playing market. I am passionate about "guitar playing" and feel like I can better market to that segment then the rest of my competition using innovative marketing tactics.



Ill wrap up so I don't babble on... Ive almost finished writing up my business plan with what may be the smartest or dumbest marketing strategy ever, but that's just the kind of person I am. I need your advice though on the build phase. Im planning on outsourcing the build on freelancer, it's a simple site with basic search and messaging functionality, and member profiles. It will be free and wont have any complex functionality so shouldn't be an overly complex build. Ive prepared decent wireframes and requirements to get the product I have in mind. I worry about the template/deisgn though. If I contract to freelancer it could be picked up by someone with poor design skills who ends up trying to use a template, its very important for me that the site looks very professional so I thought to avoid that problem I could hire a pure designer to help design the templates and then give that to a pure dev for the backend. But im told by a friend that would limit the language used for scripting? As in the dev must be able to work on the template language? Could someone advise or explain? And what do you recommend for the DB language? The Scripting? The Frontend?



Massive heartfelt thank you for reading and any advice you give!
#back #database #dating #development #dream #end #front #online #resource #starting #template
  • Profile picture of the author origin
    before you hire one or decide on which programmer / designer you are going to choose, ask to see their portfolio. you will then be able to see if they have the skills that you will require for your design part of the project. thus limiting your risk.
    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[9489248].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author Stilliwander
    you think thats better than separating the front and back end development?

    And any thoughts on what languages are best for the back/front?
    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[9489282].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author origin
    You may not have to separate the two, if your developer claims to be a designer also, then just check his portfolio.

    Your backend will most likely be PHP and MYSQL, but it depends on your specs. Place a job on freelancer.com and see what comes up.
    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[9489574].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author Marked09
    Dear Stillwander, Here's my honest opinion please don't be offended.

    When I read your post I see that you have lots of excuses from starting your own business based on your story but then you have another excuse when you finally started implemented your plan.

    I only see you are going in circles, you want to perfect everything. My suggestion is get it done, regardless of how you think your site is ugly. Then find someone to critic on it.

    You will be surprise that it does not look that bad. When I was starting out I was afraid to launch my own product because I thought it looks ugly and imagined myself not selling one single copy.

    I finally had the courage to launch it and the launch was not that bad.It's not the best launch but atleast I made some money.

    So get em done! Perfection and Over thinking things will lead you broke!

    You can start by hiring a web developer and design a simple one IMO then just tweak it little by little. At least you're going somewhere.
    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[9493301].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author Steve B
    Originally Posted by Stilliwander View Post

    Spending lifesavings starting dream dating site, want the front end to look professional . . .

    Wanderer,

    Please don't do this - it will be a huge mistake. You don't need to spend very much money at all to get started and validate your business idea and model. Set aside $100 to get started. You can always fix, adjust, modify and perfect as you go.

    Start small and lean, prove your money making ability quickly, then scale up from that point. To put your life savings at risk on a dream is not smart when you can test your dream for a song.

    The very best to you,

    Steve
    Signature

    Steve Browne, online business strategies, tips, guidance, and resources
    SteveBrowneDirect

    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[9493319].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author Tom Addams
    Stilliwander, listen to Steve B.

    I'm not entirely unfamiliar with your niche and what you're doing. The model requires a fortune invested to go the route you intend to take and, trust me, you've got more competition than you think. I have no idea what your niche is, but I do know this:

    1. If it's a profitable niche, you'll have competition soon;
    2. People will already be promoting this niche, but sending to other sites.


    Some affiliates spend 5 figures a month promoting dating sites and the average newbie affiliate is in the game too, either using BH or GH/WH techniques.

    I hope you won't take offense at this. You're highly-motivated, intelligent, and you're a dreamer. In other words: you're one of the guys who will do well. All I'm trying to do is protect you against a "possible" mistake.

    What I would do is look at getting this idea off the ground without investing all your savings. There are cheaper, safer routes.
    Signature

    I Coach: Learn More | My Latest WF Thread: Dead Domains/ Passive Traffic

    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[9493385].message }}
    • Profile picture of the author Stilliwander
      Originally Posted by origin View Post

      You may not have to separate the two, if your developer claims to be a designer also, then just check his portfolio.

      Your backend will most likely be PHP and MYSQL, but it depends on your specs. Place a job on freelancer.com and see what comes up.

      Ill put it for the developer to decide based on specs then. Thanks for sharing the knowledge!


      Originally Posted by Marked09 View Post

      Dear Stillwander, Here's my honest opinion please don't be offended.

      When I read your post I see that you have lots of excuses from starting your own business based on your story but then you have another excuse when you finally started implemented your plan.

      I only see you are going in circles, you want to perfect everything. My suggestion is get it done, regardless of how you think your site is ugly. Then find someone to critic on it.

      You will be surprise that it does not look that bad. When I was starting out I was afraid to launch my own product because I thought it looks ugly and imagined myself not selling one single copy.

      I finally had the courage to launch it and the launch was not that bad.It's not the best launch but atleast I made some money.

      So get em done! Perfection and Over thinking things will lead you broke!

      You can start by hiring a web developer and design a simple one IMO then just tweak it little by little. At least you're going somewhere.

      No, your 100% correct. That is the honest turth, im afraid, im very afraid of failure and loss, its crippling. It makes it so hard to do the simplest tasks. Your mind pushes you back so you dont get to the next step, thinking you cant fail if you dont try. I battle with this everyday and have done so for the past 5 years. Im ashamed of myself. Thats why ive been trying to take steps so i cant back off and i cant retreat. I opened a seperate bank account and put it my seed money promising never to touch it again except for business, ive been telling everyone that i plan on starting a business online so that i have peer pressure as well.

      If i spent 20k on this and only got 200$ a month stable return it would be worth it to me, because i would have finally done something. I know i may fail 99%, but 100% i cant keep living the 9 to 5 a slave to another person. I want to be free and to do good things with my life and help people and i care about my niche, while my competitors are exploiting it.

      Originally Posted by Steve B View Post

      Wanderer,

      Please don't do this - it will be a huge mistake. You don't need to spend very much money at all to get started and validate your business idea and model. Set aside $100 to get started. You can always fix, adjust, modify and perfect as you go.

      Start small and lean, prove your money making ability quickly, then scale up from that point. To put your life savings at risk on a dream is not smart when you can test your dream for a song.

      The very best to you,

      Steve
      Do you mean in another venture? I love the lean startup concept but ive always thought of it as a method of testing new business models/concepts to see if they gain traction. But mine is a business that is running for several competitors and especially in dating its very difficult to go for a lean start up, its even hard with a big fat one.

      My main selling point isnt a revolutionary idea or anything, its just that i know there are basic things my niche needs that are very simple but not available, my competition isnt a guitarist themselves so they dont understand that niche , i can leverage greatly with that.

      So do you mean another venture? leave dating all together?

      Originally Posted by Get Rich Methods View Post

      Stilliwander, listen to Steve B.

      I'm not entirely unfamiliar with your niche and what you're doing. The model requires a fortune invested to go the route you intend to take and, trust me, you've got more competition than you think. I have no idea what your niche is, but I do know this:

      1. If it's a profitable niche, you'll have competition soon;
      2. People will already be promoting this niche, but sending to other sites.


      Some affiliates spend 5 figures a month promoting dating sites and the average newbie affiliate is in the game too, either using BH or GH/WH techniques.

      I hope you won't take offense at this. You're highly-motivated, intelligent, and you're a dreamer. In other words: you're one of the guys who will do well. All I'm trying to do is protect you against a "possible" mistake.

      What I would do is look at getting this idea off the ground without investing all your savings. There are cheaper, safer routes.
      I am a ridiculous dreamer, im also the all in kind of guy. I dont hold back in anything and dont do half measures. Your very right it is super competitive, that kind of turns me on. My 20-25 k life savings are a drop in the bucket compared to my competitions budget, that also turns me on, having to be creative to my marketing tactics, i love the idea of force multipliers in war :

      Force multiplication - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

      I agree its a shit idea putting everything in your first real attempt, like a virgin thinking he will blow her mind, 4 times that same night, that first time, when hes never been to first base. But ive got a stable job, i can support myself if i lost everything very easily and have 10 k in assets and IOUs that i could liquidate on a rainy day. You think its ok to go all in like that? How else would i go for this dating venture without at least 20 k?


      Update: Im done with being scared, finalizing specifications and then going out to look for a developer/designer

      P.S thanks guys for taking the time to respond, its good to have people around you to advise you, ill keep updating you
      {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[9519802].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author zakclayton
    The back end will be very closely linked to the font end and therefore i would say you need someone who is going to work on both projects, from a development standpoint anyway. This way you can ensure continuity. A team who has both talented front end / UX developers and designers + some good back end programmers would also be cool, but likely cost you a lot more.

    Drop me a PM with your budget for the project and a little more information about the website and ill help you where i can. I develop complex online production systems and bespoke CMS for a living and understand the scale of the job at hand.

    A note on the language, i don't really think it is an issue, just make sure the setup you use is stable and secure. It will usually be a developers preference when it comes to what language to use. It will likely be a case of PHP or .NET for the server side with a MySQL DB back end. There are a lot of frameworks to choose from to speed up development so that could be an option to.

    Anyways, let me know if i can help you scope this out at all.
    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[9520084].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author NeedBucksNow
    Hey. If you really want to make a stable income why not use an affiliate dating site that is already established with thousands of members? I believe you can make some good commissions with them & would probably be pretty easy to sale with the right advertising. After this takes off, then I would find a freelancer that will build your professional looking site that can compete with the ones that are already out there. Just saying, but that would give you additional income & you wouldn't have all your eggs in one basket.
    Signature

    HOW TO QUIT YOUR BORING JOB AND START MAKING MORE CASH MARKETING FROM YOUR HOME!
    http://needbucksnow.com/
    JOIN MAXBOUNTY TODAY AND I'LL SHOW YOU HOW I'M FINALLY MAKING MONEY ONLINE USING PPC!
    http://www.needbucksnow.com/top-cpa-offers/

    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[9520121].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author shani99
    Hi
    You are really inspiring. And it's a great idea.
    But do you already have experience in internet marketing business.
    Don't get me wrong. Your idea is brilliant.
    But please please don't put your life saving right away in this project.

    Start small . Make a website .
    Learn SEO and get your site ranked as the first in google results.
    I'm trying to help
    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[9520234].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author Ttrain
    stilliwander, really inspiring man.

    But before you go out and spend your life savings, you might want to consider a few things.

    First, you should look at what other popular dating sites are built with. Trust me, this will save you a ton of headache. These sites have already developed something that scales and solves a lot of problems that you will run into. So pick one that is similar to what you're trying to build. Here's a few I found:


    Tinder : Helps you connect/hook up with people in your area

    Database : MogoDb with mongoose - mongoose is faster than mysql, scales a bit easier (in certain situations), and is non relational. You would use mongoose if you don't have an exact idea of the structure of your data, or if you want a lot of flexibility.

    Platform/ Server : Amazon EC2/S3 - Basically, this is like having your website in the cloud. By using amazon, they are able to scale quickly, pay as you grow, and not have to worry about downtime.

    API : Node JS and Express framework - Without getting to complicated, I would assume that they use nodejs because it's fast as hell, scales nicely on Amazon's platform, and because it's easy to create an api in Node.

    Bottom Line : If you are building a large location based dating website, with matching features. Than pay close attention to what Tinder is doing. If you just want a website that's super fast and scales well, than still pay attention to what Tinder is doing.


    okCupid : Another large, matching based, dating site.

    Database/ backend : C++ - I have very little experience with C++ but I would imagine that they used it because it's faster than Php. This is not a good reason alone, and if PHP's speed is a concern, look into Phalcon Php. It's built ontop of C (meaning it's very fast).

    Front End : HTML, CSS, JS - they're front end is fairly standard stuff. You can find any front end freelancer who knows how to do all three.

    Front End Framework - OkPub - It looks like they developed they're own framework. When you have millions in funding, you can do things like this. I wouldn't recommend it for you though. Just find one that is well tested and known by a lot of people ( angularJS, Backbone, Ember), or just don't use one at all.

    Bottom Line : if you are building a standard, web based, dating site, with some social features, than look at Okcupid. They're not as worried about speed as Tinder is, and that's probably because Tinder needs to serve data rapidly (people do a lot of swiping on that app).

    A couple other recommendations :

    1) Find a developer that knows how to program on the front-end and the back-end : If you truly want to build a fantastic UI and UX, than this is a must. If you really want to hire two people, than make sure the programmer and the designer are working closely together. This is how great products get built. Think Apple.

    2) Don't spend a lot of money : You said that you are building something basic, so you shouldn't be spending more than $3000 to get this project done. If however, you plan to have massive traffic and you need it to scale, than you might have to fork over a bit more.

    3) Find a designer, who knows how to design for conversions : A dating site lives and dies by it's ability to convert visitors into users/paying customers. This is why you see a lot of shaddy tactics like fake profiles, and pay to message. If your site doesn't convert, than you are going to burn through cash like crazy.

    Hope that helps, and good luck!
    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[9520670].message }}
    • Profile picture of the author Stilliwander
      Originally Posted by zakclayton View Post

      The back end will be very closely linked to the font end and therefore i would say you need someone who is going to work on both projects, from a development standpoint anyway. This way you can ensure continuity. A team who has both talented front end / UX developers and designers + some good back end programmers would also be cool, but likely cost you a lot more.

      Drop me a PM with your budget for the project and a little more information about the website and ill help you where i can. I develop complex online production systems and bespoke CMS for a living and understand the scale of the job at hand.

      A note on the language, i don't really think it is an issue, just make sure the setup you use is stable and secure. It will usually be a developers preference when it comes to what language to use. It will likely be a case of PHP or .NET for the server side with a MySQL DB back end. There are a lot of frameworks to choose from to speed up development so that could be an option to.

      Anyways, let me know if i can help you scope this out at all.
      I think its as you and others have said, separating the two tasks when outsourcing is very difficult and i should stop trying to be a perfectionist. Ill put the two together. Ill probably PM you when i have more time, but quick question, is there anything i should be afraid of? Im not paranoid but ive known some shitty people in my life, is there a chance they could put in a backdoor so they can find my site later and take my database(members, lists etc)? If so how would i mitigate this?

      Originally Posted by blogsbringbucks View Post

      Hey. If you really want to make a stable income why not use an affiliate dating site that is already established with thousands of members? I believe you can make some good commissions with them & would probably be pretty easy to sale with the right advertising. After this takes off, then I would find a freelancer that will build your professional looking site that can compete with the ones that are already out there. Just saying, but that would give you additional income & you wouldn't have all your eggs in one basket.
      You mean an established site then use IM to help them get members for commission while building a list as i go along?

      To be honest in a sense im building this for myself, if i come out of this project with a potential life partner im happy blowing everything 100 times over haha, i also have ego issues, i always want to take on Goliath, especially when i see Goliath providing a really shitty product and business philosophy. Im just not a fan of affiliates to be honest, it still feels like im working for someone.

      Originally Posted by shani99 View Post

      Hi
      You are really inspiring. And it's a great idea.
      But do you already have experience in internet marketing business.
      Don't get me wrong. Your idea is brilliant.
      But please please don't put your life saving right away in this project.

      Start small . Make a website .
      Learn SEO and get your site ranked as the first in google results.
      I'm trying to help
      I started work on a classifieds site for an obscure country when i was 18, a 2000$ project, my parents only funded me with half...1 year after i needed the money! So project was half built and abandoned. However i never learnt so much in my life as i did from that. Some of my top lessons:

      -DONT reinvent the wheel
      -HAVE A BUSINESS PLAN, even if its just for you to see
      -when outsourcing, write specifications, detailed specifications with proper wireframes

      Today that country now has a similar site at which the estimated income is id say 9k/month profit... The owner is a friend of mine now.

      Originally Posted by Ttrain View Post

      stilliwander, really inspiring man.

      But before you go out and spend your life savings, you might want to consider a few things.

      First, you should look at what other popular dating sites are built with. Trust me, this will save you a ton of headache. These sites have already developed something that scales and solves a lot of problems that you will run into. So pick one that is similar to what you're trying to build. Here's a few I found:


      Tinder : Helps you connect/hook up with people in your area

      Database : MogoDb with mongoose - mongoose is faster than mysql, scales a bit easier (in certain situations), and is non relational. You would use mongoose if you don't have an exact idea of the structure of your data, or if you want a lot of flexibility.

      Platform/ Server : Amazon EC2/S3 - Basically, this is like having your website in the cloud. By using amazon, they are able to scale quickly, pay as you grow, and not have to worry about downtime.

      API : Node JS and Express framework - Without getting to complicated, I would assume that they use nodejs because it's fast as hell, scales nicely on Amazon's platform, and because it's easy to create an api in Node.

      Bottom Line : If you are building a large location based dating website, with matching features. Than pay close attention to what Tinder is doing. If you just want a website that's super fast and scales well, than still pay attention to what Tinder is doing.


      okCupid : Another large, matching based, dating site.

      Database/ backend : C++ - I have very little experience with C++ but I would imagine that they used it because it's faster than Php. This is not a good reason alone, and if PHP's speed is a concern, look into Phalcon Php. It's built ontop of C (meaning it's very fast).

      Front End : HTML, CSS, JS - they're front end is fairly standard stuff. You can find any front end freelancer who knows how to do all three.

      Front End Framework - OkPub - It looks like they developed they're own framework. When you have millions in funding, you can do things like this. I wouldn't recommend it for you though. Just find one that is well tested and known by a lot of people ( angularJS, Backbone, Ember), or just don't use one at all.

      Bottom Line : if you are building a standard, web based, dating site, with some social features, than look at Okcupid. They're not as worried about speed as Tinder is, and that's probably because Tinder needs to serve data rapidly (people do a lot of swiping on that app).

      A couple other recommendations :

      1) Find a developer that knows how to program on the front-end and the back-end : If you truly want to build a fantastic UI and UX, than this is a must. If you really want to hire two people, than make sure the programmer and the designer are working closely together. This is how great products get built. Think Apple.

      2) Don't spend a lot of money : You said that you are building something basic, so you shouldn't be spending more than $3000 to get this project done. If however, you plan to have massive traffic and you need it to scale, than you might have to fork over a bit more.

      3) Find a designer, who knows how to design for conversions : A dating site lives and dies by it's ability to convert visitors into users/paying customers. This is why you see a lot of shaddy tactics like fake profiles, and pay to message. If your site doesn't convert, than you are going to burn through cash like crazy.

      Hope that helps, and good luck!
      Mate, thats some bloody good info. As stupid as i sound for this i really forgot to check what other sites are using, i will do that. And yes i was thinking :

      -3000 for the site
      -2000 for content ( 100 articles and 100 small videos)
      -2000 for a VA over a year taking 2-3 hours a day maybe
      - the rest is a crazy marketing stunt/stunts/tactic


      You seem like a very technical guy, could i bother you or anyone else with this. My aim 1 year after launch is:

      -25,000 members
      -100,000 pageviews a month
      -page 1 on google for my niche

      With each member with say 5mgb of pics and another mgb of meta data 25k*6 thats around 150GB of data to handle.

      1. Is this a vast amount for MySQL to handle ? Im kind of afraid of the lack in available human resources and skill in MONGO and Hadoop

      2. Is there any concerns i should have? Scaling? Speed? Etc?

      Thank you, all of you!
      {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[9522576].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author Stilliwander
    P.S some people are sending offers, i know thats against WF TOS, but theres others also asking to see my business plan. While im not naive enough to think everyone is just tryin to help and not trying to make money off me, i do believe alot of you out there are good people who want good things for others. Anyone care to give some hints and tips about keeping the turds away without dissing someone with a good heart?

    Also when undergoing a general venture like this what to be wary of, for e.g developers putting in code to your site which copies your email list/db etc or content writers that will just paraphrase other material? Maybe this should be another thread
    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[9522589].message }}
    • Profile picture of the author Ttrain
      Originally Posted by Stilliwander View Post

      P.S some people are sending offers, i know thats against WF TOS, but theres others also asking to see my business plan. While im not naive enough to think everyone is just tryin to help and not trying to make money off me, i do believe alot of you out there are good people who want good things for others. Anyone care to give some hints and tips about keeping the turds away without dissing someone with a good heart?

      Also when undergoing a general venture like this what to be wary of, for e.g developers putting in code to your site which copies your email list/db etc or content writers that will just paraphrase other material? Maybe this should be another thread
      Good question man. Most people have good intentions, but if I don't know wether I can trust somebody... I don't. I trust human nature instead ( that sounded cynical ). Even the best of us tend to be self interested by default, so pick somebody who has more to loose by scamming you than by actually helping you. I would pick somebody who has built a solid reputation and isn't willing to throw that away to steal your business plan or your money.

      Also, very few people are ever going to steal your idea no matter how great it is. Most people just aren't willing to commit $1000's of dollars and hundreds of hours to a dream that isn't theirs.

      Originally Posted by Stilliwander View Post


      Mate, thats some bloody good info. As stupid as i sound for this i really forgot to check what other sites are using, i will do that. And yes i was thinking :

      -3000 for the site
      -2000 for content ( 100 articles and 100 small videos)
      -2000 for a VA over a year taking 2-3 hours a day maybe
      - the rest is a crazy marketing stunt/stunts/tactic


      You seem like a very technical guy, could i bother you or anyone else with this. My aim 1 year after launch is:

      -25,000 members
      -100,000 pageviews a month
      -page 1 on google for my niche

      With each member with say 5mgb of pics and another mgb of meta data 25k*6 thats around 150GB of data to handle.

      1. Is this a vast amount for MySQL to handle ? Im kind of afraid of the lack in available human resources and skill in MONGO and Hadoop

      2. Is there any concerns i should have? Scaling? Speed? Etc?

      Thank you, all of you!
      That's not a lot of data. You might even be able to get by with a shared host. But I would still go dedicated just in case, who knows, you might just blow away your own expectations!

      As far as speed goes, it really doesn't matter how many people you have signed up. You could have millions. The only thing that matters is how many people are going to be online at one time, and what those people are doing. If you enable some good caching, speed shouldn't be a problem at all. MySQL should be more than enough for what you're trying to do.

      But to be honest, I really wouldn't worry about any of this stuff. It's what developers call "premature optimization", and it's the biggest crime you can commit. It will keep you from moving forward, burn through a lot more cash, and worst of all, waste your time. I know exactly how it feels to want to get everything perfect. It's a problem that I'm still trying to get over. But what helps me is to physically write out the essential things that I need for the site to run, and just do those things. Check each one off as you go. This will keep you focused.

      Most of all, just start! Here's the exact code stack I would use if I didn't know much about programming and was building what you're building:

      Database : MYSQL
      Front End Javascript : a custom JQuery plugin
      Front End Template : Nothing, just plain PHP
      Style Sheet Langauge: Sass
      Server Side Language : PHP
      Caching : Memcached
      Hosting : Bluehost
      Domain name : Namecheap

      That's it. Everything you could possibly need to get your dating site off the ground, can be done with the above. Find a developer who can do the above well, and you'll be all set. As you grow, you can start adding the fancy stuff. I'm Looking forward to visiting the site!
      {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[9525087].message }}
    • Profile picture of the author Brent Stangel
      Originally Posted by Stilliwander View Post

      P.S some people are sending offers, i know thats against WF TOS, but theres others also asking to see my business plan. While im not naive enough to think everyone is just tryin to help and not trying to make money off me, i do believe alot of you out there are good people who want good things for others. Anyone care to give some hints and tips about keeping the turds away without dissing someone with a good heart?

      Also when undergoing a general venture like this what to be wary of, for e.g developers putting in code to your site which copies your email list/db etc or content writers that will just paraphrase other material? Maybe this should be another thread
      I strongly suggest you slow-the-f@#k-down.

      You are going to lose every penny unless you get a clue what you are doing first.

      The sharks are already circling...
      Signature
      Get Off The Warrior Forum Now & Don't Come Back If You Want To Succeed!
      All The Real Marketers Are Gone. There's Nothing Left But Weak, Sniveling Wanna-Bees!
      {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[9525098].message }}
      • Profile picture of the author kilgore
        OP, you mentioned the lean startup model. I highly, highly recommend this approach. I'm on startup #3 -- the first two failed for a large part because my partners and I spent too much time writing specs and business plans and not enough time getting the product out to our customers for feedback and validation. Remember: a startup is an organization formed to search for a repeatable and scalable business model. With a lean startup, the point is to get your business model in front of your customer quickly so that you can adjust it as you learn more from your customers. My current venture (startup #3) seems to be working. We took the idea from idea to launch in less than three months and while the product we started with wasn't anywhere near what we have now (let alone hope to have in the future), it was enough for us to (a) validate our idea and (b) get ideas on how to improve it.

        That said, I would like to offer a few words of caution:
        1. The odds are stacked against you -- up to 90% of new businesses fail. This isn't a statement about your skills, idea or anything else about you, but just a statement about your realistic odds for success. Before you put your money on the table, make sure this is something that (a) you really want to do and (b) you're in a solid position to do right now. It's a little trite, but this article outlines some good reasons when it might not be a good time to start a business: 10 Signs You Might Not Be Ready to Start a Business | Fox Small Business Center.
        2. $30,000 seems like a lot, but it's really not. Being a web developer myself and having worked with coders on various freelancing sites, I can tell you that as in all things, when hiring developers, designers and other people for your team, you get what you pay for. If you think you're going to get a great developer for $5 or $10 an hour, think again. Top developers in any country have no trouble getting work and high wages; they aren't submitting small bids for projects on Freelancer.
        3. Yes, you're probably right that you'll eventually need custom software, but in the spirit of a lean startup, I'd recommend you at least consider basing your startup on an existing platform. You might end up doing a complete re-write at some point, but if you do, it'll be for a proven business model rather than investing a lot of time and money in something you're not even sure will work. This is how I got startup #3 out the door so fast and while I'm not at the point where I'm re-considering my platform, if I do make changes it will be with a great deal of knowledge about what my customers want and need. Moreover, if I decide to seek investment (an idea I'm also playing around with), it'll be from a position of strength as I already have a solid revenue stream and a growing user base.
        4. It sounds like you don't have much of a technical background. This isn't insurmountable -- but it's a huge red flag to me. How are you going to evaluate your developers? Are you really going to determine your stack based on advice from strangers in a forum? That seems crazy. I'd strongly recommend you consider finding a technical partner. Research already seems to suggest that businesses with partners have a greater chance of success, but you can also fill in a lot of the holes in your skill base this way -- without breaking the bank. It's also a good check on your idea and business model: if you can't convince a partner to take a chance with you, you might not have the great idea you think you do. I should also mention that I highly recommend finding a local partner -- someone you already know and trust and someone you can meet with in person.


        Originally Posted by Brent Stangel View Post

        I strongly suggest you slow-the-f@#k-down.

        You are going to lose every penny unless you get a clue what you are doing first.

        The sharks are already circling...
        ^^ This is good advice. No need to rush. Naturally there's some danger that someone else might take your idea, but honestly ideas are the easy part. Execution is hard. Before you dive in make sure you're ready and able to execute.

        Good luck!
        {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[9525227].message }}
        • Profile picture of the author SFGary
          I fully endorse Kilgore's viewpoint. As another entrepreneur who lost his shirt in two tech startups - Bank the Money. I am assuming you are not a developer? If yes, then I suggest searching for a co-founder who is a top developer. if a developer co-founder is not convinced that it is a viable proposition then you have your answer. If you still bull ahead, you will flush a lot of cash down the drain with contractor(s) and have nothing to show for it or if you do, it will be after a huge delay. The dating market is extremely well covered and mature. IAC is king of the hill and they still eat up smaller sites. IAC themselves are trying to figure out how to monetize Tinder without alienating the user-base.

          You might be able to get users if you do go ahead but unless you have a "special sauce" that others in this business have not thought of, there will be an exodus of users to other sites, there's just too many of them. I can't even imagine a marketing budget for this app to get above the noise level and a viral hit happens to one in maybe a thousand startups. Anyway, if we have not dissuaded you, good luck. Been there, done that and still regret all the mistakes I made.
          {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[9532629].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author WillR
    Validate the idea first. Just because another website is doing a similar thing does not validate the idea. For all you know they could be losing money each and every day. It costs a LOT in server and hosting charges to host a very active dating site like that. We'd probably be talking multiples of your total savings just to host a site that got wildly successful.

    Instead go and try to find the traffic you would eventually be driving to the site. Create some type of simple lead capture page along the same lines of a dating site. See how that goes first and once people join your list survey them and get a lot more detailed insight into this niche before you go ahead and throw all your money at it.
    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[9525166].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author dgclark
    I was walking into a casino and a man stopped me and said:

    "give me 25% of the money you are going to gamble with today, I will keep half and give you the rest when you leave. That way you will have enough money to get back home."

    I should have listened to him.

    Use your money wisely. I do not know about the technical side but you are getting very good financial advise.Listen to it.
    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[9525304].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author WillR
    If you do decide to go ahead with this I think the best advice given above is to find a coder who would be interested in partnering up with you on this project -- you then own half the site each.

    Having a partner with a vested interest in the project can be very handy down the line. Otherwise you are forever having to rely on 3rd party people who are just getting paid by the hour and thus have no extra incentive to do your work over anyone elses.
    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[9525381].message }}
    • Profile picture of the author Stilliwander
      Originally Posted by Ttrain View Post

      Good question man. Most people have good intentions, but if I don't know wether I can trust somebody... I don't. I trust human nature instead ( that sounded cynical ). Even the best of us tend to be self interested by default, so pick somebody who has more to loose by scamming you than by actually helping you. I would pick somebody who has built a solid reputation and isn't willing to throw that away to steal your business plan or your money.

      Also, very few people are ever going to steal your idea no matter how great it is. Most people just aren't willing to commit $1000's of dollars and hundreds of hours to a dream that isn't theirs.



      That's not a lot of data. You might even be able to get by with a shared host. But I would still go dedicated just in case, who knows, you might just blow away your own expectations!

      As far as speed goes, it really doesn't matter how many people you have signed up. You could have millions. The only thing that matters is how many people are going to be online at one time, and what those people are doing. If you enable some good caching, speed shouldn't be a problem at all. MySQL should be more than enough for what you're trying to do.

      But to be honest, I really wouldn't worry about any of this stuff. It's what developers call "premature optimization", and it's the biggest crime you can commit. It will keep you from moving forward, burn through a lot more cash, and worst of all, waste your time. I know exactly how it feels to want to get everything perfect. It's a problem that I'm still trying to get over. But what helps me is to physically write out the essential things that I need for the site to run, and just do those things. Check each one off as you go. This will keep you focused.

      Most of all, just start! Here's the exact code stack I would use if I didn't know much about programming and was building what you're building:

      Database : MYSQL
      Front End Javascript : a custom JQuery plugin
      Front End Template : Nothing, just plain PHP
      Style Sheet Langauge: Sass
      Server Side Language : PHP
      Caching : Memcached
      Hosting : Bluehost
      Domain name : Namecheap

      That's it. Everything you could possibly need to get your dating site off the ground, can be done with the above. Find a developer who can do the above well, and you'll be all set. As you grow, you can start adding the fancy stuff. I'm Looking forward to visiting the site!
      THANK YOU! I think ill lay off the overly helping hands on here, i hope no one gets offended, i really appreciate everyone who is sincere. Good call on the over optimization! I hope to be writing back to you for advice on how to handle all the traffic ill be getting

      Originally Posted by Brent Stangel View Post

      I strongly suggest you slow-the-f@#k-down.

      You are going to lose every penny unless you get a clue what you are doing first.

      The sharks are already circling...
      Im a virgin kind of, but ive been watching porn forever! lol have you seen Oldboy? the Korean Version?
      Ive been learning and reading for years, its time i let myself loose, ive got a pretty decent plan, have faith in me but i know 1 year from now i statistically will be back here telling you you were right !

      Thanks for the shark warning!

      Originally Posted by WillR View Post

      Validate the idea first. Just because another website is doing a similar thing does not validate the idea. For all you know they could be losing money each and every day. It costs a LOT in server and hosting charges to host a very active dating site like that. We'd probably be talking multiples of your total savings just to host a site that got wildly successful.

      Instead go and try to find the traffic you would eventually be driving to the site. Create some type of simple lead capture page along the same lines of a dating site. See how that goes first and once people join your list survey them and get a lot more detailed insight into this niche before you go ahead and throw all your money at it.
      I see what your saying, the other two competitors have been around for 8-14 years and from what ive learnt have very very primitive operations.


      Originally Posted by kilgore View Post

      OP, you mentioned the lean startup model. I highly, highly recommend this approach. I'm on startup #3 -- the first two failed for a large part because my partners and I spent too much time writing specs and business plans and not enough time getting the product out to our customers for feedback and validation. Remember: a startup is an organization formed to search for a repeatable and scalable business model. With a lean startup, the point is to get your business model in front of your customer quickly so that you can adjust it as you learn more from your customers. My current venture (startup #3) seems to be working. We took the idea from idea to launch in less than three months and while the product we started with wasn't anywhere near what we have now (let alone hope to have in the future), it was enough for us to (a) validate our idea and (b) get ideas on how to improve it.

      That said, I would like to offer a few words of caution:
      1. The odds are stacked against you -- up to 90% of new businesses fail. This isn't a statement about your skills, idea or anything else about you, but just a statement about your realistic odds for success. Before you put your money on the table, make sure this is something that (a) you really want to do and (b) you're in a solid position to do right now. It's a little trite, but this article outlines some good reasons when it might not be a good time to start a business: 10 Signs You Might Not Be Ready to Start a Business | Fox Small Business Center.
      2. $30,000 seems like a lot, but it's really not. Being a web developer myself and having worked with coders on various freelancing sites, I can tell you that as in all things, when hiring developers, designers and other people for your team, you get what you pay for. If you think you're going to get a great developer for $5 or $10 an hour, think again. Top developers in any country have no trouble getting work and high wages; they aren't submitting small bids for projects on Freelancer.
      3. Yes, you're probably right that you'll eventually need custom software, but in the spirit of a lean startup, I'd recommend you at least consider basing your startup on an existing platform. You might end up doing a complete re-write at some point, but if you do, it'll be for a proven business model rather than investing a lot of time and money in something you're not even sure will work. This is how I got startup #3 out the door so fast and while I'm not at the point where I'm re-considering my platform, if I do make changes it will be with a great deal of knowledge about what my customers want and need. Moreover, if I decide to seek investment (an idea I'm also playing around with), it'll be from a position of strength as I already have a solid revenue stream and a growing user base.
      4. It sounds like you don't have much of a technical background. This isn't insurmountable -- but it's a huge red flag to me. How are you going to evaluate your developers? Are you really going to determine your stack based on advice from strangers in a forum? That seems crazy. I'd strongly recommend you consider finding a technical partner. Research already seems to suggest that businesses with partners have a greater chance of success, but you can also fill in a lot of the holes in your skill base this way -- without breaking the bank. It's also a good check on your idea and business model: if you can't convince a partner to take a chance with you, you might not have the great idea you think you do. I should also mention that I highly recommend finding a local partner -- someone you already know and trust and someone you can meet with in person.




      ^^ This is good advice. No need to rush. Naturally there's some danger that someone else might take your idea, but honestly ideas are the easy part. Execution is hard. Before you dive in make sure you're ready and able to execute.

      Good luck!
      Thank You!!!!
      Have you seen Guy Kawazaki 10 mistakes of entrepreneurs? Really drove the idea home of the execution ebing more important than the idea.

      All your list points i accept wholeheartedly, im the fool who plans to take on a 15 year established site. But i have a battle plan, force multipliers, making my 1000$ on par with their 10,000$. I have allies that lie in waiting for the attack. I have blackops inside ready to open the gates to their kingdom. And i have their subjects begging for me to take over though they have never met me. And im a stubborn m$#&*(ker!

      Happy to go up in glorious flames as long as i give it my all mentaly.

      Originally Posted by dgclark View Post

      I was walking into a casino and a man stopped me and said:

      "give me 25% of the money you are going to gamble with today, I will keep half and give you the rest when you leave. That way you will have enough money to get back home."

      I should have listened to him.

      Use your money wisely. I do not know about the technical side but you are getting very good financial advise.Listen to it.
      I never gamble, Even when i gamble

      Originally Posted by WillR View Post

      If you do decide to go ahead with this I think the best advice given above is to find a coder who would be interested in partnering up with you on this project -- you then own half the site each.

      Having a partner with a vested interest in the project can be very handy down the line. Otherwise you are forever having to rely on 3rd party people who are just getting paid by the hour and thus have no extra incentive to do your work over anyone elses.
      Im not good at teamwork, however i have someone i trust with my life that makes his living off IM/Dev, just not this kind, while i do involve him i thank you for reminding me, i should keep him much closer since he knows the land.





      Question to all now if you dont mind:

      From a Dev/Design perspective, what kind of questions can you think of that really differentiate the guys who know what thyre doing from those who dont?
      {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[9528457].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author nicholasb
    I would hold off on fancy designers and programmers, and make sure you create a product or service that sell and converts well first.

    I always do all the graphics last, first I make sure I have an audience that buys and spends money, then I find out what they are selling and create a product they want, get it selling and converting well then make it all fancy with the money I make.

    I'd be a little nervous going into something like this just because the lack of competition, I'm not sure the proof of concept is really there. Having 300,000 members doesn't really mean anything. Are they paid member free members?

    I'd go with a safer approach considering your risking your life savings.

    Find hungry audience

    Find what they are buying and spending money on

    Create an offer they want

    Place it in front of them
    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[9528477].message }}
    • Profile picture of the author kilgore
      There's no magic set of interview questions that lets you know someone knows their stuff. I'll also reiterate that you're at a major disadvantage if you don't have a technical background -- even if you do ask the "right" questions, how are you going to evaluate their responses?

      Again: consider finding a technical partner. Would you start an auto-repair shop without a mechanic on your team? I suppose it's possible to make it work, but it would be very, very hard. You don't have to (and in fact it's a bad idea to) split the company 50/50, especially if you're putting in the brunt of the investment, but someone on your team should be technical.

      And speaking of teams, it's rather concerning that you say you are "not good at teamwork" -- teamwork is absolutely essential in the type of business you describe, especially given your lack of technical knowledge. You don't have to know everything to succeed, but you do need to be able to assemble and work with a team that'll make up for any shortcomings you may have, whether they're co-founders, staff, contractors or partnering organizations.

      All that said, if it were me interviewing a developer, I'd ask about:
      • What they've done in the past, the technologies they used and how they used them. I'd want to know about their programming languages, OSes they've worked with, cloud experience, libraries/frameworks they've used, etc.
      • The kind of projects they do for fun (every developer worth anything has side projects they're working on, even if it's just for use at home -- bonus points if they're working on open source projects and you can see the fruits of their labor)
      • OOP theory and general programming concepts with some pointed questions to make sure they didn't just memorize a textbook (examples of topics include overloading vs overriding, abstract classes vs interfaces, when to make methods public/protected/private, variable scope and enclosures, unit testing -- also ask when they've used these concepts and why)
      • What their favorite libraries/frameworks/languages are and why (the "why" being more important than their preferences)
      • What blogs or other resources they follow to stay on top of latest trends and the kind of things they learn there

      Also:
      • I'd ask to see a sample of their code and have them walk me through what they did and why they did it
      • Give them an algorithm to solve in pseudo-code in front of you and watch how they think about the problem (their thinking process is more important than their answer)
      • Lastly, if they passed all of the above, I'd give them a coding test. Here, I'd have them complete a small task for me in the primary programming language they'd be using so they could demonstrate their abilities.

      Hopefully, reading the above will help you to realize why technical knowledge would be useful when evaluating who to hire. Even if you don't have a technical co-founder, perhaps you can get your friend to sit in during interviews.
      {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[9530231].message }}
      • Profile picture of the author Stilliwander
        Originally Posted by nicholasb View Post

        I would hold off on fancy designers and programmers, and make sure you create a product or service that sell and converts well first.

        I always do all the graphics last, first I make sure I have an audience that buys and spends money, then I find out what they are selling and create a product they want, get it selling and converting well then make it all fancy with the money I make.

        I'd be a little nervous going into something like this just because the lack of competition, I'm not sure the proof of concept is really there. Having 300,000 members doesn't really mean anything. Are they paid member free members?

        I'd go with a safer approach considering your risking your life savings.

        Find hungry audience

        Find what they are buying and spending money on

        Create an offer they want

        Place it in front of them
        hungry audience! another very important thing ive felt. My Targets are starving!

        Originally Posted by kilgore View Post

        There's no magic set of interview questions that lets you know someone knows their stuff. I'll also reiterate that you're at a major disadvantage if you don't have a technical background -- even if you do ask the "right" questions, how are you going to evaluate their responses?

        Again: consider finding a technical partner. Would you start an auto-repair shop without a mechanic on your team? I suppose it's possible to make it work, but it would be very, very hard. You don't have to (and in fact it's a bad idea to) split the company 50/50, especially if you're putting in the brunt of the investment, but someone on your team should be technical.

        And speaking of teams, it's rather concerning that you say you are "not good at teamwork" -- teamwork is absolutely essential in the type of business you describe, especially given your lack of technical knowledge. You don't have to know everything to succeed, but you do need to be able to assemble and work with a team that'll make up for any shortcomings you may have, whether they're co-founders, staff, contractors or partnering organizations.

        All that said, if it were me interviewing a developer, I'd ask about:
        • What they've done in the past, the technologies they used and how they used them. I'd want to know about their programming languages, OSes they've worked with, cloud experience, libraries/frameworks they've used, etc.
        • The kind of projects they do for fun (every developer worth anything has side projects they're working on, even if it's just for use at home -- bonus points if they're working on open source projects and you can see the fruits of their labor)
        • OOP theory and general programming concepts with some pointed questions to make sure they didn't just memorize a textbook (examples of topics include overloading vs overriding, abstract classes vs interfaces, when to make methods public/protected/private, variable scope and enclosures, unit testing -- also ask when they've used these concepts and why)
        • What their favorite libraries/frameworks/languages are and why (the "why" being more important than their preferences)
        • What blogs or other resources they follow to stay on top of latest trends and the kind of things they learn there

        Also:
        • I'd ask to see a sample of their code and have them walk me through what they did and why they did it
        • Give them an algorithm to solve in pseudo-code in front of you and watch how they think about the problem (their thinking process is more important than their answer)
        • Lastly, if they passed all of the above, I'd give them a coding test. Here, I'd have them complete a small task for me in the primary programming language they'd be using so they could demonstrate their abilities.

        Hopefully, reading the above will help you to realize why technical knowledge would be useful when evaluating who to hire. Even if you don't have a technical co-founder, perhaps you can get your friend to sit in during interviews.
        Thank you so much for giving a great reply! Im adding your questions and tips to my list to cover all the bases.

        Im a shitty team player in that if im in a project with a team, i hate relying on people, i hate waiting on them, i also tend to be a perfectionist so always want to improve on their work. These are all bad qualities and i will fail in life if i dont learn to change. But i do have redeeming qualities.

        The guy i told you about is my technical partner, more of an advisory really and more of a programmer than a site designer but still has knowledge in the area.

        Thank you so much for the input, ill keep pushing through and update you!
        {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[9531241].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author Stilliwander
    Hey!
    So ive gone through 70 possible developers, shortlisted to 8 and now down to the final 3. I need your opinions and advice. Ive been going through portfolios and interviewing with my more technical minded friend, hes away on holiday for a week but i also want your take on things. Here are the candidates:

    John Tools(India): Has a very extensive portfolio,a company, good design and dev skills. Response times were average but were professional and well constructed.

    Billy(India): extensive profile as well, a company and good design and dev skills. Showed the most interest in the project and communicated quickly and often. While not informal, the replies were not as thought out and well constucted/profesional as John Tools

    Jack(Philipines): The creative type, a company, while they have completed some good development work it doesnt seem to be crazy complicated projects. However the graphical and user experience design is superb. When specs were offered they took a while to provide feedback which was kind of off putting but provided very details analysis of the specs, more than the others

    All bids for the projects are around the same, completion time also the same.

    What is your take on who to chose?
    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[9585356].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author sr.20
    I would heavily research the 3 top competing sites and find out the likely hood of ranking and how much it would cost on paid advertising to get some traction in the market.

    These sites rely heavily on traffic to make money and many of the sites have the market share of traffic

    The first thing that would help is getting an aged domain with a high PR
    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[9585781].message }}
    • Profile picture of the author Stilliwander
      Im not sure the last reply was in context...

      Anw i have gone with John tools, developement has been under way for 1 week and is expected to finish by the 23rd of December.

      I have created using a content many landing page concepts which will all need to be tested.

      Im contacting 10% of the people i have marked as strategic alliances ( people who can send traffic my way thats laser targeted if i do them a little favor thats almost free).

      Website agreed price was a little over $2500.

      Any more tips or hints would be welcomed
      {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[9610844].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author gregdavidson727
    Originally Posted by Stilliwander View Post

    TLDR: Spending lifesavings starting dream dating site, want the front end to look professional, have been advised to create custom site and not use white label. Should I :

    outsource entire project to freelancer?

    Outsource template and backend separately on freelancer?

    What language should I use for DB?Backend?Template?Scripting?

    THANK YOU!!!

    Hey Everyone!

    Ive been dreaming of creating a passive online income since I was 18 ( 6 years now), I dream of making a stable $4000 a month so I can leave my 9 to 5 and start living life, travel, help people and work on the projects ive dreamed of needing nothing but an internet connection to manage my business.

    All these years I've had idea after idea, I'd do some analysis and research then id poke holes in my own ideas and back out. When I worked myself up to pushing through id procrastinate, things that should take days would take months, then life would wash those ideas away. But I'm done with that, im done with waiting, with fear and watching life go by. Don't get me wrong ive got a good career which I'm thankful for and pays well, but I don't see this as a life working another 40 years in the corporate world. I've amassed a decent amount of savings over my life, $30,000, and I'm putting it all on the line to try and make my dreams come true. No backing out!



    I've decided to start a dating site catered for a certain niche, let's say people who play the guitar(it's not), I believe it's an untapped market of around 50 million . There are currently 3 sites catering for this niche, they suffer from:

    -fake profiles

    -bad UI

    -paid communication only

    The No.1 among them has around 300,000 active members according to my estimates, I know that sites owner is not a guitar player themselves and has a very poor understanding of the guitar playing market. I am passionate about "guitar playing" and feel like I can better market to that segment then the rest of my competition using innovative marketing tactics.



    Ill wrap up so I don't babble on... Ive almost finished writing up my business plan with what may be the smartest or dumbest marketing strategy ever, but that's just the kind of person I am. I need your advice though on the build phase. Im planning on outsourcing the build on freelancer, it's a simple site with basic search and messaging functionality, and member profiles. It will be free and wont have any complex functionality so shouldn't be an overly complex build. Ive prepared decent wireframes and requirements to get the product I have in mind. I worry about the template/deisgn though. If I contract to freelancer it could be picked up by someone with poor design skills who ends up trying to use a template, its very important for me that the site looks very professional so I thought to avoid that problem I could hire a pure designer to help design the templates and then give that to a pure dev for the backend. But im told by a friend that would limit the language used for scripting? As in the dev must be able to work on the template language? Could someone advise or explain? And what do you recommend for the DB language? The Scripting? The Frontend?



    Massive heartfelt thank you for reading and any advice you give!
    Starting a website is the easiest part. Marketing it is about 99% of the puzzle. Even the best websites fail because the owners can't figure out how to get enough traffic.
    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[9610857].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author Stilliwander
    Update:

    Website 40% completed.
    A bit of fear and hesitation contacting marketing alliance members to promote me. Ill pull by pants up and do it!
    Competitors poping up left right an center, they are all still paid and only one had decent usability so im still in the game.
    Shiny Object Syndrome comes now and then but my friend/mentor helps me swat them back down.
    Launch date should be December 23.
    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[9651458].message }}
    • Profile picture of the author kilgore
      Nice to hear it seems to be working out for you. Has your friend/mentor had a chance to inspect the code that your developers are writing? If not, I strongly advise you to have him look ASAP. Even if things are "working", sloppy code can be a beast to debug when problems arise (and they always do) or to add onto when you decide that you want more features (as you always do). Better to make sure they aren't taking any shortcuts sooner than later!

      But assuming all is good under the hood -- congrats. 40% complete is an accomplishment already. And I wouldn't worry too much about competition. At least not yet. Google wasn't the first search engine. Amazon wasn't the first online book seller. And the list goes on. Don't worry about being the first or the only -- just make sure you're the best!
      {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[9651548].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author DubDubDubDot
    Let's not underestimate the competition. They are there and they are huge.

    PlentyOfFish
    Tinder
    Badoo
    OkCupid
    etc...

    You are going to suffer from empty social network syndrome early on. That is something you should be planning now to address.
    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[9651640].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author Work1099
    You may find it preferable to avoid being bogged down in the technical details. There are more profitable areas for you to focus as the executive of your firm. Find someone who knows all those details through-and-through, then hire them or their firm to complete it on your behalf ... while you turn your sights to more pressing details.
    Signature


    Work1099 Simplifies Self-Employment.

    Get 600+ Proven Business Models and Money-Making Ideas at: http://work1099.com
    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[9652179].message }}
    • Profile picture of the author Stilliwander
      Originally Posted by kilgore View Post

      Nice to hear it seems to be working out for you. Has your friend/mentor had a chance to inspect the code that your developers are writing? If not, I strongly advise you to have him look ASAP. Even if things are "working", sloppy code can be a beast to debug when problems arise (and they always do) or to add onto when you decide that you want more features (as you always do). Better to make sure they aren't taking any shortcuts sooner than later!

      But assuming all is good under the hood -- congrats. 40% complete is an accomplishment already. And I wouldn't worry too much about competition. At least not yet. Google wasn't the first search engine. Amazon wasn't the first online book seller. And the list goes on. Don't worry about being the first or the only -- just make sure you're the best!
      Almost forgot about that! Ill have my friend take a good look! Thanks for the advice!

      Originally Posted by DubDubDubDot View Post

      Let's not underestimate the competition. They are there and they are huge.

      PlentyOfFish
      Tinder
      Badoo
      OkCupid
      etc...

      You are going to suffer from empty social network syndrome early on. That is something you should be planning now to address.
      My target audience wouldnt even look at those sites, they are too silo-ed and have specific needs. I plan to aggressively acquire 1000 members to seed the site before any major marketing so its not empty. agressivly as is in find, meet and get them to understand whats going on.

      Originally Posted by Work1099 View Post

      You may find it preferable to avoid being bogged down in the technical details. There are more profitable areas for you to focus as the executive of your firm. Find someone who knows all those details through-and-through, then hire them or their firm to complete it on your behalf ... while you turn your sights to more pressing details.
      Agreed, i have my friend/partner to do that for me.


      Thanks guys!
      Its getting close to D day, im shitting my pants
      {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[9657881].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author Stilliwander
    Ok so here goes…this will be painful growth but f it

    This may be long winded so make a cuppa….

    So i had made my business plan, drawn up a very decent spec doc and was now going out to market for a developer. I found a very skilled developer who promised the project for around $3000, india based freelancer.

    Attempt 1:
    -he asked for 2 months and $3000
    -i made the mistake of not checking up on him since he would always say will provide working prototype in the end, 3 months pass and i have a wonky product packed with bugs
    -i never appreciated the “testing phase”, thought you’d just test it yourself, tell the guy what was wrong and it would be fixed, BIG MISTAKE
    -3 months of back and forth with bugs, due to his lack of understanding and me being an idiot and not taking testing as a documented process
    -after a total of around 6 months i started seeing the design itself as very sucky, it was intended to be simple and beautiful but it sucked balls, graphically it was also very ugly since it was made by a developer. My design was also a carbon copy of some competitors, it was bullshit and a waste
    -i fell into depression, 6 months and $3000 wasted on nothing
    -i hated myself for being a failure and a loser, after a month or just a couple of weeks of sulking i picked myself up and said **** it, **** you, **** everyone and everything, i refuse to quit, I’m gunna lose everything before i accept quiting

    Attempt 2:
    -Took everything i ****ed up on, learnt from it, created a new functional design in 20 days as opposed to 2 months last time. Created an actual graphical design draft instead of a dry wireframe, done in 2 days
    -new functional design reduced website from 28 functional pages to 5, this was a massive UX improvement and removed a lot of the bullshit and future bugs around the site
    -went to market for a graphic designer “99 designs competition”, showed them by draft graphical design and required color scheme etc, got a bunch of results and developed the closest vision to mine, design was 100x better than the last attempt, its very important to get a seperate dev and designer i think, even from companies the best designer and dev are more likelyy not to be in the same place
    -went to market for a dev, ended up with a very honest small company, cost of $1100 (much less functionality and complexity in new design) and graphic were now done separately, 40 days expected time to complete
    -first testable design was there in 2 months, now i used a google drive sheet to write up all tests, the status, result, comments, screenshots etc, this was soooooo much better than before and very very helpful
    -I was awol for 1 month and the company took 1 month working on issues so 4 months later the project was ready
    -End of project gave to some test clients ( friends and family) and found that users still didn’t like the signup process of entering email password etc a total of 23 fields
    -got depressed cause it felt like a shit product

    Attempt 3:
    -within 1 week got off my ass, stopped dwelling on the shit and tried to make things better
    -slight changes made the site much more beautiful to use, down from 23 fields to 5 but still having all the info using Facebook signup, awesome responses received
    -also realised the need for a mobile platform so spearheaded into getting a hybrid app, so a web mobile enabled version and then the wrapping into native wrapper
    -took another 4 months because i had to be away for two months and 1 month dev lag and 1 month dev work, site is there in mobile version with still some bugs, hybrid wrapped app still in progress as finding a new dev has been filled with issues

    Yes I’m a fktard and its been forever and i haven’t even launch, i suck i know but I’m not giving up, i think a big part f this is the fear to launch, if it launches and just sucks balls i lost, thus still trying to postpone everything

    Now my goals:
    -clean up desktop and mobile website
    -get it wrapped into native container
    -contact marketers
    -launch
    -marketing
    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[10365789].message }}

Trending Topics