jkulmala's comments

jkulmala | 9 years ago | on: Rails 5.0: Action Cable, API mode, and more

Michael, I learned Rails from your tutorial and started implementing my SaaS app the day I hit chapter 14. That's how I went from corporate Java slave to location-independent entrepreneur. Your tutorial is that good, it's all I needed.

Thank you so much for keeping the tutorial alive!

jkulmala | 11 years ago | on: Bite-Sized Metrics Email Course

Do you subscribe to Seth Godin's or Simon Sinek's posts?

This is a series of similar very small posts, but instead of being inspirational, they talk about SaaS metrics and how to use them.

Here's an example:

"At Growth Ceiling MRR your current marketing spend is required just to prevent your SaaS from shrinking.

As your business grows, eventually the back door will have as much traffic as the front door. Aim to be profitable at that point. Try to keep the Growth Ceiling MRR 20-50% higher than your MRR goal".

jkulmala | 11 years ago | on: The daily stand-up is an anti-pattern

I've used Scrum/Agile for several years and daily stand-ups seemed to the thing a lot of people hated. As a started my own business (Financial Analytics for SaaS) I finally understood why. An effective process shouldn't need polling to keep it going - which the meetings really are.

I'm happy to see new processes appear, where that kind of extra hassle is removed, like: http://timeblock.com

In timeblock, communication happens when a developer can't get his task done. Otherwise everyone can assume that the week will proceed as planned.

In practice this seems to keep people happier than Agile/Scrum.

jkulmala | 11 years ago | on: “I’m in the US – what if I just ignore the EU VAT changes?”

It's not what they pay, it's what they get to reduce. If you purchase supplies etc. you get to reduce the VAT you've paid.

So if you have $0 VAT from EU purchases, but $40 VAT from sales, you pay $40. But if you paid $40 VAT from EU purchases, and have $40 VAT from sales, you pay out $0.

jkulmala | 11 years ago | on: “I’m in the US – what if I just ignore the EU VAT changes?”

I explain that in this other post for EU guys: http://www.happybootstrapper.com/2014/eu-vat-changes-online-...

Reverse charge moves the VAT-paying responsibility from you to your customer in another EU country. The responsibility can only be moved from business to business.

You’ll write an invoice/receipt without VAT (or 0% VAT) and include a text “Reverse charge, VAT directive art. 44” and you are done. In practice the text is often missing, as people re-use the same invoice format they use for non-EU sales.

jkulmala | 12 years ago | on: Lessons from My Almost Failed Launch

You are totally entitled to your opinion, but here's what happened from my point-of-view:

1. You read/skim my post

2. You assumed I'm selling advice (or info-product)

3. You assumed I didn't know my topic

4. You assumed I would be stupid enough to tell people "gee, I don't know anything about this biz optimization thing" while selling advice on the topic via the same channel

5. You assumed I was a "get rich quick seeker" out of my depth

6. You assumed that Amy's course somehow was responsible for this

7. And now it's not Amy - it's us students, who the courses like this attract

I'm not offended though, I'm just amused. LOL. And I can see how my communication and not being native english-speaker are partially responsible for this.

The funniest thing here is that many of us "get rich quick seekers" in Amy's course have spent years building online businesses. Yeah, we definitely don't like what you are saying :D

jkulmala | 12 years ago | on: Lessons from My Almost Failed Launch

I'm not trying to sell 'how-to' while learning 'how-to'.

There's a reason why my blog articles are boring "how to calculate your metrics right" posts instead of more sexy "try these things for better conversions" type of posts. I'm not a CRO or business optimization expert and I'm not trying to pass as one.

That would be fake and it would hurt my business.

Like I said in my post, my problem is that people don't realize that SaaS Compass doesn’t rely on my knowledge on how to run a SaaS. They, like you (even after reading my post!), expect that it would and look for that authority.

It's a question of perception and selling, not of a real lack of experience/expertise.

As Amy said, it's about copywriting. But I also have this gut feeling that no matter how I present SaaS Compass some people are still going to look for more "authority" or whatever it is.

jkulmala | 12 years ago | on: Lessons from My Almost Failed Launch

Hmm...

Do I need authority to solve a problem? No. If I can solve a problem, I can solve it.

Does missing authority mean that I'm not an expert? No.

I need (web) authority for selling. Don't mix up authority and expertise. It's possible to know a lot about something and still have zero authority in web.

Does solving a familiar problem mean that someone will buy it? No. And if you don't have customers, you don't have a business.

What you present here is just a more intelligent version of "if you build it, they will come" and we all know that doesn't work.

It doesn't matter what all fancy stuff I'd have skill & expertise to build if I can't sell any of it.

And as I said in that post, I'm happy and proud of this launch's performance :)

jkulmala | 12 years ago | on: Lessons from My Almost Failed Launch

You are mixing up the mistakes I made and what 30x500 teaches.

I went against Amy's advice when I picked my audience/product. The process does take care that you'll have the authority to sell what you build. I just wasn't following the process to the point.

That's hardly someone else's fault than mine. In fact, I'm very happy with 30x500 and recommend it to anyone interesting in building an online product business

jkulmala | 12 years ago | on: Lessons from My Almost Failed Launch

Thanks! You are SO right!

I had some extra challenges on authority all along since I didn't pick an audience that I'd belong in myself. I just couldn't see myself writing technical tutorials for Java developers - and I didn't want to pick accountants either.

And I did a huge amount of little mistakes! I consider myself lucky in that I eventually reached the launch goal at all.

page 1