Indie hackers share useful links.
Links to resources Indie Hackers found useful, educational, interesting, or valuable.
Hey,
I noticed I have a list of links to resources I frequently consult, as I think most of us do. I asked Indie Hackers to share one link to a resource they found useful, educational, interesting, or valuable. Here follows some of the interesting replies I got.
First of all you should be coming up with at least five possible business ideas every day. This part should be basically effortless. People trying to sell this part are scamming you.
🔨 Tool & information for growth hackers and marketers, on how to grow your business.
30+ Growth Hacks, Analytics, Facebook Ads, PR, Viral Marketing, etc.
So to improve your user experience, you need to understand the biases & heuristics affecting those four decision-cycle steps.
💎 This guys has super valuable & inspiring threads on Twiter.
Can the time investment lead to life changing outcome? And is there recurring revenue so that each dollar I send to war comes back with friends?
📝 The Ultimate Guide To Writing Online.
Writing online is the fastest way to accelerate your career. It’s the best way to learn faster, build your resume, and find peers and collaborators who can create job and business opportunities for you.
⚡ Basically Google trends, but with a twist of trying to predict topics that are on the rise.
📝 Improve your current project’s copywriting.
Capture their attention with your product’s biggest benefit. Explain how you deliver the value proposition above and/or differentiate yourself from your competition.
❓ 40 Questions from Y-Combinator to crash-test your startup.
If you are running a startup, you should make decisions and answer questions much more than anybody else - to employees, clients, partners, investors, and it's just at work.
📈 Advanced handbook on Growth Marketing.
This advanced handbook explains how to acquire customers for your site/app, and how to entice them to purchase.
⚡ 9 Ways to Earn Customer Trust When You Have Zero Sales.
Customer trust is hardest to earn when you don't have any customers.
These are just a few links that stood out to me. You can check out the original post here to see all the responses I got.
Cheers,
Hessel
Find me on Twitter & Indie Hackers