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Marketing Strategy: Veteran software/mobile developer. Trying to decide best model for a new business. Advice?
JL
JL
Jason Lengstorf, Expert in location independence/work-life balance. answered:

How important is scaling?

For example, if you're charging $400/hour for consulting and filling 20 hours a week, would you need to scale?

Products are great, but there's a lot of unbillable hassle involved in the path toward getting there. Your product needs to have a big enough audience to give you a strong paid user base. You need time set aside for marketing, support, new features, maintenance, and all the little things that are sure to come up. You probably need to create a second (and third, and so on) product as time goes on.

And if the product only grosses a few grand a month, it can feel like you're stuck: on one hand, you have paying customers; on the other, you're making barely $40K/year for the effort.

All that being said, a product with a solid user base and a solid team can pay serious dividends in the long run (assuming all goes well). It's just the struggle through the opening months/years to get the product to a place where you can actually pay yourself and staff and marketing budgets and such.

I've had successes with product businesses, but they've always been a bit more high-touch than I prefer. (That whole "there's no such thing as passive income" thing.)

Consulting offers a much shallower curve, and you can always "scale" by raising prices until you hit the proper blend of hours:billing.

However, consulting also puts more responsibility on your shoulders to be available to your clients.

In my experience I've found it's not impossible to make a good living as a consultant without killing yourself (six figures, <30 hours a week) if you set things up responsibly at the outset and know how to sell your own value.

I'd be happy to share my strategies on this with you if you're interested.

Good luck!

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