robjama | 10 years ago | on: How I Quit My Job and Built My First App
robjama's comments
robjama | 10 years ago | on: How I Quit My Job and Built My First App
robjama | 11 years ago
robjama | 11 years ago | on: Next Keyboard for iOS
Not sure what you're referring to. We started working on Next in the summer before Blackberry Passport was released.
robjama | 11 years ago | on: Ask HN: What are your biggest pet peeves with the iOS keyboard?
robjama | 12 years ago | on: Taplytics (YC W14) Run A/B Tests On iOS Without Waiting For App Store Updates
robjama | 12 years ago | on: Show HN: Having a hard time waking up? Check out Wake Alarm
robjama | 12 years ago | on: Start Something: The Power of Side Projects
robjama | 13 years ago | on: Don’t Launch Your Product
IF you know people will want your product. OR are going after a mass market with a better X OR need to get up the App Store charts (hit based apps)? THEN aim for a huge hard-launch. A big product launch in this case is pretty much mandatory.
IF you are not sure people will want it OR are searching for product/market fit THEN defer launch.
Always launch! Depending on the product/market sometimes you go big other times you fly low with a soft-launch.
robjama | 13 years ago | on: iPhone App Review sites to email when you’re about to launch
- If your goal is impact and reach...you should be analyzing the traffic of the blogs you're contacting. A lot of those sites probably only have a few hundred readers. A review on Gizmodo & TUAW would probably be 10x more effective than mentions on all of those sites.
- We sometimes tend to forget that the R in PR stands relations. So build those relationships don't just spam. - Get to know bloggers (do your research) and get them to know you well before you go pitching (add value, send them tips, get to know them on twitter and IRL)
- Intros are also very helpful. Have a friend who got a review on insert blog name? Ask him to make an intro since he's established himself as someone who's made something newsworthy.
PR is kind of like trying to get a job. You could blast out 50+ generic resumes + cover letters and hope someone calls. Or you could do your homework, choose the top 3 companies you really want to join, get intros and do something remarkable to get noticed.
robjama | 13 years ago | on: Side Hustle: Overcome Your Objections to Starting Your Own Business
I started my second company on the side while I was working at a large software company. On top of the full-time corporate gig I had recently gotten married and was expecting my first child. My first app launched only a couple of weeks after the birth of my daughter which was perfect because It was partly inspired by her (it was an app for kids). The app ended up doing really well on the App Store cracking the Top 50 overall list. After a few more months of hard work I was able to leave my job and haven't looked back since.
Side hustles are like tricycles...it's the first step to learning to ride on your own.
robjama | 13 years ago | on: Side Hustle: Overcome Your Objections to Starting Your Own Business
robjama | 14 years ago | on: Mega Millions Lottery
robjama | 15 years ago | on: My winter break project — Silk
robjama | 15 years ago | on: To Do List Tool needed