I’ve been grinding on my solo project—a little app to help remote workers find coworking spots nearby—for months, and some days it feels like I’m yelling into the void. Nobody’s signing up, and I’m burned out. But I’ve figured out a few tricks to keep going:
Set Tiny Wins: I break it into micro-goals, like “fix that bug today” or “post on X once.” Hitting those feels good, even if the big picture’s slow.
Talk to People: I hop on X, ask random remote workers what they’d want in an app like mine. Even if they don’t sign up, the feedback keeps me pumped.
Track Progress, Not Just Users: I log every little improvement—code commits, design tweaks, whatever. Seeing a list of wins reminds me I’m moving forward, even if signups are slow.
Take Breaks: When I’m stuck, I step away—go for a walk, play a game. Coming back fresh helps me see the project differently. It’s not glamorous, but it’s keeping me in the game. Last week, I got one signup after months, and it felt huge.
How do you stay motivated on your solo projects? Any tips to share?
basisword2 months ago
Depending on how long you’ve been working on it and how hard you’ve marketed it, it’s important not to miss a signal that you should move on. While we all have problems with motivation from time to time, some things aren’t worth motivating yourself for and it’s important to recognise that. This might not apply if it’s just a hobby project - but a hobby project should probably be fun. If it’s a serious attempt at a business rethink your marketing strategy. Nothing will motivate you more than signups and revenue.
mertleee2 months ago
As a past founder this is immensely important. Think very carefully about he financial impacts of "taking the idea to term" and more importantly if you're happy with your current life. In many cases if you're asking yourself questions like this you likely don't have traction to make this a real thing and should maybe consider moving on.
muzani2 months ago
Demotivation is a feature, not a bug. For some things you do need discipline, but bear in mind it's a safety switch to keep humans from wasting their time.
Personally I've always done it for the fans. The people who take the time to fill out the surveys with lots of thanks or write articles about how much they loved my app. Or the people who drive to the next city to transfer money (because we didn't support card payments then) and then tell us to keep the change.
It's more than just "signups and revenues", it's more about not letting people down.
Sayyidalijufriop2 months ago
Yes
because of that I also ship my startup asap because if we spent much time on something and we not get any benefit we will burn out
theoryofx2 months ago
You've got to work on something where there's an immediate distribution channel and customers. Don't work on anything so speculative as this, where you're just hoping there will be someone who wants it.
You have to know how you're going to sell it before you build it. There are only a handful of things that work, which other people are using and you can copy.
StickyRibbs2 months ago
All my solo projects suffered from all the things you mentioned. Once I found a cofounder for my current project, these problems went away because
1. There’s social altruism activated because you two are constantly doing things not just for yourself, but for the other person. 2. View point diversity. You get way more feedback with another talking head at the same table, helps unblock you more than you think. And this can ignite new insight and therefore new notification energy!
Is there a way to hack this as a solo founder? I think so!
I had a former co founder who I would always bounce ideas off of and even tho he wasn’t directly working on my projects, he would check in with me and kind of act like a rubber duck I could talk to. This could be your friends, partner, or strangers!
Also, time is your best friend, for good or for worse. I think back on projects I started and quit after a year, I would like to think those projects would be successful if I just put more time into it.
gadders2 months ago
Forget AI Girlfriends - let's launch AI Co-Founders.
The only problem is I'm a solo developer so need to bootstrap my own AI co-founder first.
CharlesW2 months ago
> The only problem is I'm a solo developer so need to bootstrap my own AI co-founder first.
Here you go: https://chatgpt.com/g/g-67d9acd9106881919145eacc538ec9a2-vir...
gitgud2 months ago
Just used it, I thought this response was hilarious
https://i.imgur.com/UqA7eHy_d.webp?maxwidth=760&fidelity=gra...
comrade12342 months ago
AI co-founder with equity.
gadders2 months ago
2 years time:
"My AI co-founder has just stitched me up on the cap table. Does anyone know a good AI lawyer that can sue them?"
danjl2 months ago
While a co-founder can help, it can also ruin everything. As you say, there are other relationships and ways of interacting that can easily fill the same role, ie. advisors, board members, customers, etc. Statistically, I think that co-founder infighting is one of the largest reasons why many startups fail. It's also a fantastic way to ruin friendships.
jmathai2 months ago
Having just one other person in the trenches is so helpful. I hadn't thought about the social altruism angle but I think there's a lot of truth to it.
I also agree about time. I think new products follow a model similar to compounding interest. It's very small at the start - sometimes negligible but over time things add up.
Lastly, I think we get desensitized to success. Getting the first user, the first ten, etc. These are not small milestones. They're meaningful.
Lastly lastly, if it's something you want to make money from then focus primarily on user acquisition and secondly on product. Commonly difficult for builders to do but not doing so cements delayed failure.
cjs_ac2 months ago
I used to be a schoolteacher; I left teaching and became a software engineer a few years ago. For the past two years, I've been building a solo Saas product, that solves a problem I spotted when I was teaching. I hope to launch later this year.
To answer OP's question, about a year ago, I told my parents what I was building. My mum is a teacher, so she's my first test user. Every time I talk to them, they ask how things are going, so I need to keep working on it so I've got something to tell them.
To join in on everyone else's roasting OP's business idea: OP, what are you offering your users that they can't get from typing 'coworking space' or 'cafe' into their search engine of choice? It's not enough to make something useful, it also has to be something that your customers don't already have.
HenryBemis2 months ago
I had the exact same thought.. "doesn't Google maps already solve this problem all over the planet?" About a decade before I remember using Google's 'hub'(I don't remember what it was called) in a couple of EU capitals. Free, super fast internet, clean spaces, free desks, whiteboards all around. You had to pay if you wanted a 'room with a door' and a projector, but apart from that if you didn't mean the eavesdroppers it was perfectly fine (and relatively quiet).
nextts2 months ago
Google has commodized its complement. (Ads is the product, business discovery is a complement)
avastmick2 months ago
I’m in a similar space. Solo working on an Edtech solution. Man it can be hard. @cjs_ac, I’d be keen to chat, if you’d have time.
arf172 months ago
I taught for 20 years and developed an Edtech SaaS which I do fulltime now. I also would welcome connecting with you.
pointwebdev2 months ago
I am currently in year 16 and have been taking web development seriously for about a year. I am a member of two coding groups and it has now become pretty much a hobby. I'm currently working on a SAAS as well. Would love to connect
robot2 months ago
I don't see this to be a problem worth solving.
Some problems are problems but for a startup to succeed it needs to be a very important problem.
Having a unique insight is also not enough. It needs to be a highly leverageable insight or advantage. One that you can use in this startup; as you grow your leverage it will help you get users and revenue.
Neither seem true here. When that happens, the journey is a grind, you try to push hard but people don't seem interested.
how do I get motivated? well I have to believe there is a 'leverageable' insight or angle that will grow when I make progress ;) belief that it's a big problem people care about and that I am growing unfair advantage over time solving it.
mertleee2 months ago
I think it's important to highlight that this kind of advice isn't negative and it's well meaning. As engineers it can be easy to form a distortion field about what we're working on and the perception of those who might actually want (or not want) to actually buy it.
Being honest with yourself is the best way to be kind to yourself. Moving on is not giving up.
avemuri2 months ago
Some thoughts (I used to run a chain of 20+ coworking spaces)
* Remote individual workers are the least attractive customer for the typical coworking space (that isn't a cafe). Small and unpredictable revenue, plus higher support per head, since the account is only one head.
* Remote workers also aren't a great fit for you. Very few like to hop around. Their reasons are typically avoiding loneliness, finding a reliable place to focus etc. And so would only use your platform until they find a space they like.
* SMBs are the sweet spot. Coworking is cheaper AND less overhead for them. In many countries they don't get access to grade A space even if they're willing to pay. For the coworking space, it's only slightly more work than a solo account and significantly more recurring and reliable revenue. You may be better off targeting small teams.
* One particular pain point is expiring inventory - remote workers actually fit this well since they're willing to go for a floating desk. Most spaces would be willing to offer discounts on this. Kind of like last minute flight or hotel deals.
* Another related product is meeting and conference room bookings. Also expires and has a market in WFH teams.
* The last two also have a better business model fit since they are intermittent and people may be more inclined to shop around, allowing you to take a cut of every transaction. For any kind of recurring contract, you're probably limited to taking a one time lead gen or brokerage fee since you have no grounds to maintain a relationship with the customer after the initial match.
pickle-wizard2 months ago
This is a really good response. Your last two points are both features I could use.
chrisweekly2 months ago
Respectfully, I don't see a viable business here. As a remote worker, I can hardly imagine "signing up" for an app to find coworking space. Your efforts would be better spent on something more compelling. PMF (Product:Market Fit) is hard enough when there's actually a decent addressable market.
sky22242 months ago
> Respectfully, I don't see a viable business here.
Isn't all of WeWork this business? Granted, I know they've had their share of problems with profitability and bankruptcy, however, I think that stems from issues other than the business not necessarily being viable.
chrisweekly2 months ago
> Isn't all of WeWork this business?
No, it's not even close. WeWork owns real estate.
OP is trying to sell subscriptions to an app that helps users find coworking locations.
brudgers2 months ago
Wework’s business was controlling real-estate via leasing. It never had enough money to own meaningful amounts of office space in multiple major markets.
monomial2 months ago
I agree with chrisweekly, it's not even close. WeWork provided value to people by assuming some risk in signing those longer term lease agreements and repackaging it to people looking for shorter term office space or to those who would otherwise not want to enter into a commercial office lease themselves. I don't think OP is really offering any value add over a quick search for "coworking <city>" and I imagine that's why nobody is signing up. Personally, I find that even a free SaaS subscription is a liability these days so the value add needs to be highly compelling.
brudgers2 months ago
I was only making a technical point about real-estate.
Critiquing the OP’s project doesn’t interest me intellectually.
akomtu2 months ago
I'm afraid, those remote workers you're trying to help prefer working solo, for the same reason you're working solo. Perhaps, try to change your idea: make it an airbnb-style office rental app, where tech workers rent a home office to other tech workers.
carlbren2 months ago
The way I think is the most crucial thing in my case. I tend to focus more on the positive (I trained myself) and being healthy (food, sport, sleep, walks...). With good energy it's way easier.
From what you wrote, I'm not sure, but it seems that the "talking to people" and the "problem definition" steps could be improved to better identify the SPECIFIC problem you are solving, the causes behind the problem, the users motivation to solve it... By asking questions like: Is it a problem people are trying to solve? How many? At which frequency?
Because solving an important and specific problem will make it easier to target potential users and for them to be naturally interested.
Wish you the best!
anshumankmr2 months ago
I have a couple of SaaS ideas, one I have worked on but I don't feel its gonna earn that much money. Still doing it for fun, plan to launch it soon here.
My motivation is purely on how it makes me feel, I feel like an engineer solving problems while at work I am just working on Jira tickets that I don't feel personally impact me or anyone except a corporate bottomline.
ph4evers2 months ago
Is this a side project or your main endeavor?
It will take time to get traction. I have a bigger picture in mind and shipping small updates and features constantly helps a lot. I’m building a tool for myself and I use it on a daily basis and keep improving it with the things I like, that keeps me motivated.
herbst2 months ago
Having built many things I agree with most of the comments here. Step back and built something else.
I have had MVPs turn into something years later when I didn't expect it anymore, some projects, the majority to be fair, never made it tho.
brokegrammer2 months ago
I've been think that maybe it's not a good thing to be motivated because it's possible that you're working on the wrong project.
I've been building a time tracking app for freelancers myself, and after getting some test users, I realized that people don't really want it because of various reasons.
I've been trying to continue getting more users because it's possible that I'm barking up the wrong tree, but it's also possible that my app sucks, and that I need to work on something else.
Some food for thought...
mattyreed12 months ago
What are the reasons people don’t want it?
Are you not able to simply address those shortcomings?
I’m going thru something similar (eerily similar actually) but for my B2C product, most people that hear about it quickly understand that it’s a “good idea” and want to try it and tell other people about it. Our problem is, and always has been, dev velocity. It simply takes too long to implement what we know people want and our runway gets shorter and shorter.
brokegrammer2 months ago
Reasons include other apps they're already invested in, other apps that have more features or have better looking design, etc. Some users are also using free versions of other apps, which they say is good enough for their purposes.
I agree about dev velocity being an issue. As a single developer, it's going to take ages before I can compete head to head with these other established apps, who also have good financial backing.
If I want to get customers for my product, I'll have to look for users who are currently not using anything else so that they can invest on mine. I'll probably have to invest quite a bit on paid ads in order to attract these kind of people because they're hard to come across.
Or I can try the 1000 true fans route and try to get ramen profitability. We'll see how it goes.
bob10292 months ago
> How do you stay motivated on your solo projects?
By having many of them going on at once. Diversify the portfolio.
If I only have exactly one project to work on and it starts to go poorly, my mood suffers severely.
If I have several projects to work on and one goes poorly, I can toggle to a different one and not worry about it. Inevitably, I'll swap back to what I was working on after a period of time. This also keeps me out of other subpar areas, like mindless doomscrolling or gaming for hours on end.
danjl2 months ago
That's an excellent list of positive strokes. I wanted to punch up your bullet on talking to people. Face to face is always better. It pulls me out of the void. Rather than chatting on text-based social media, set up video chats. Going to small conferences in your market is a great way to get a boost of energy. If you're good at it, you can even get a few customers. Seeing the emotions on the face of the person I'm talking to really helps boost my energy.
fs_software2 months ago
There is something unique about working on a solo project that you usually don't find in traditional software organizations: you can work on something lower priority just because you feel like it.
The sweet spot is when those tasks are complex and it really takes some motivation to get started/keep going.
I'd recommend fostering your curiosity as a mechanism for building momentum and getting stuff done, even if it's not a top priority task.
pacifika2 months ago
What’s the app? Might not sign up but am interested in creations
Sayyidalijufriop2 months ago
waitfast.netlify.app
[deleted]2 months agocollapsed
naveed1252 months ago
These are some good tips. One thing I would add is to build habits, once you have a routine of working on the solo project it makes it easier to keep going on not quit.
DazWilkin2 months ago
This really resonates with me.
Your insight is helpful almost as much as knowing that other people like me are out there too.
I think (!?) I've finally let go of a project that I've been working on for a couple of years.
A key tenet of the project (which I frequently forgot) was that it was a way for me to learn|refine technical skills and to keep me entertained|occupied.
The project certainly achieved those objectives for me and I'm a better person for doing it.
Good luck to you and I hope you continue to succeed!
rixed2 months ago
1. Write realistic weekly plans and stick to them. There is satisfaction in being able to reach a goal every week, even if you have to compromise on the quality sometime. It also helps not feeling lost if the project takes a long time.
2. Have frequent debriefs with friends and, if none is available, an IA (which will be less afraid to offend you actually).
3. A lot of sport
bochoh2 months ago
I've been grinding on kidcarekit.com for a long while in fits in spurts. I find myself working more on the DevOps side rather than the actual functionality but I've learned so much about rails and DevOps that it's been a net win for me even though it doesn't functionally do much yet!
ptsneves2 months ago
Be careful if you see yourself spending too much time on the devops side of things. You can be building a tower of work that has zero customer value in the end.
Even the supposed quality improvements found in an automated way may just turn out very expensive compared to just spending the time doing the QA yourself at specific milestones. Unless your career is devops be very skeptical and track your time and return on that time.
I learned this the hard way although I am a build/devops person professional I came to realise I had a tendency to build really complicated processes that would be ok in a hundred person team, while I actually was working solo. The upside is that there is lots of reusability for future projects and I also became very skeptical of custom CI jobs and CD tools, and try to reduce everything to env variables 1 line bash scripts. I also am very skeptical of automated integration tests as they are incredibly expensive to build and maintain.
fourseventy2 months ago
This is the way
davidtinker2 months ago
When it seems like the mountain is impossible to climb and it's overwhelming I just look for the next small thing to fix/implement and get it done. Rinse and repeat. Don't think about the bigger picture, just get stuff done. Eventually a lot of stuff gets done and you make progress.
sky_rw2 months ago
You stay motivated by remaining as close to the value you are delivering to your customers as possible, so you can feed energy from their use of the product.
This is almost impossible in a marketplace business, which is one of the infinite number of reasons that building a marketplace inevitably fails.
gabriel_dev2 months ago
Gut feeling plus enjoy the ride. But objective metrics matter too. Myself being a developer I lack many marketing and sales skills. Trying to leverage what Claude or GPT might offer to cover the skills I lack.
federalfarmer2 months ago
Thanks for sharing what's worked for you, OP. Some of these are very enriching strategies for when the grind feels insurmountable.
Some of them can also feed delusion or false signals - most people you talk to aren't going to outright tell you that your app sucks, for example.
Non-monetary signals can also be encouraging but misleading long-term. My last attempt at a solo SaaS was a financial data application that had a lot of built-in virality. People really liked it, traffic was growing, and I thought I was succeeding at "product-led growth."
But the monetizable parts of my app appealed to a completely different type of person than the viral parts. What's worse, the sales process for people willing to pay was also very different. I'd built a low-touch marketing funnel with "prosumer" pricing but needed a high-touch sales channel with few clients and a fat price tag!
It was a "pivot or die" moment and a tough pill to swallow as it was the first time I'd built a software project with lots of happy users. Those users just wouldn't pay me, and rather than burn another 6-12 months re-tooling the entire business, I killed it instead.
If you are not getting ANY traction whatsoever it may be time to move on. Please don't take this the wrong way, but I'm your target audience and I would not give you money for this. I might not even use your app, as a search engine could get me viable coworking locations and curated reviews faster and more accurately.
Maybe there is a path to success where coworking spaces themselves pay you for a listing and the remote workers themselves aren't your customers? But as they say, your paid solution has to be 10x better than any free competitor and in this case your free competitors are Google and Facebook.
kermit___2 months ago
Maybe it’s time to pivot?
suyash2 months ago
Welcome to the world of crowded apps and busy professionals. In coming future real problem would be getting people's attention, building apps is the easy bit.
digital_sawzall2 months ago
Attention is easy. Tikok is able to get mass attention in any niche.