6
Likes
11 Comments

Lessons Learned from a Lifetime of Bootstrapping with Rob Walling of Drip and TinySeed

Episode #082

At first, Rob Walling (@robwalling) didn't know what he wanted to create — he just knew that he was tired of working for other people. After he spent his savings to buy an online business, however, he found himself in a do-or-die situation. In this episode Rob tells the story behind how he dove into the deep end of what would become almost twenty years of building online businesses, culminating in the 8-figure sale of his email marketing company Drip. We also discuss Rob's latest project, TinySeed, the first startup accelerator designed for bootstrappers, and why he believes now is a better time than ever to start an online business.

  1. 2

    My Main Takeaways:

    • Rob graduated from college in 1998 and didn’t want to work a normal job. He wanted the freedom to make things. But he worked in construction for the first couple of years after graduating, before getting a salaried job as a professional programming and them moving into contracting and consulting charging about $125 an hour.

    • Rob learned to program at 8, and he loved it. Ever since then, all he’s ever wanted to do was make stuff.

    • In high-school, Rob wrote non-fiction books and sold them through classified ads, because he wanted to create something and have that thing justify his time with some income.

    • Before going into entrepreneurship (he had been working for a while), Rob already had a few properties in LA and was looking to turn those into passive income.

    • Rob would write a blog post during lunch time while working, because he was so determined.

    • Rob says that people who are able to go from a full time job to a profitable business really quickly are either very lucky or much smarter than he is.

    • It takes time: Rob dabbled in side-projects from 2002 to 2005, where he’d make stuff that would maybe get $100 a month, but wouldn’t work out despite spending months on those projects. In 2005 Rob made a software company that generated about $2000-3000 a month. And it took him until 2008/2009 to transition into entrepreneurship after he began buying existing businesses and growing them, generating him about $10-12k per month.

    • “Warren Buffet Play”: Buy a startup that is undervalued and grow it.

    • Maybe, don’t build it, buy it: Rob made his break by buying existing businesses and growing them using the skills he learned over the years.

    • When buying his first business, he paid over $10,000 and found out that it was very buggy, so he spent about 60 hours fixed bugs that the users had reported. He increased the price. It went from making $200-300 per month to $2000-3000 per month for years.

    • Work Is Life: After stopping consulting in 2009, Rob had 2 years of immense creativity. He created lots of things that he felt like creating, and spent time with family. However, by 2011 Rob was BORED! He was restless and wanted to get back into working on things.

    • Rob started using Virtual Assistants in 2007 after reading the 4-Hour-Work-Week by Tim Ferris.

    • Validate before you build: Before writing his book “Start Small, Stay Small”, he validated the idea by creating a landing page, and wrote a blog post about it. He shared it onto HackerNews, and it went onto the front page. And he got about 600 emails of people who were interested. He wrote the book, self-published it, and sold about 300 copies in the first month, generating about $9,000 in that month. The next month he sold 300 more, then the next month he sold 400, and it kept going to about 11,000 copies in total, generating about $250,000.

    • Rob says that 80% of his book “Start Small, Stay Small” is just mindset.

    • Advice for aspiring book writers: Build an audience first. By the time Rob had published his first book “Start Small, Stay Small, he already published about 300 essays on his blog. He had 25,000 RSS Subscribers. He had [been “successful” in the business for] 5 years.

    • Rob is willing to back Kickstarter projects that teach his kids technology.

    • You don’t need to build an audience before starting a software company.

    • Rob doesn’t recommend starting starting two businesses at the same time.

    • “Drip” started as an email Service Provider (like Mailchimp), then it was pivoted to an Marketing Automation Provider.

    • Don’t build something that is completely dependent on somebody else’s business.

    • “Scratching your own itch only works if a bunch of other people have the same itch.”

    • Validate with money: Rob validated his idea “Drip” by asking people if they would buy it. 11 people said yes, but 6 or 7 of those people actually paid when it was time.

    • Rob leveraged his email list, following, and connections to find people to ask about Drip.

    • Beware of hedonic adaption: After his first business success, Rob found making $30,000 a month boring so wanted to do something bigger when starting his next business, Drip.

    • Rob made sure Drip was a 7 figure business by having a higher price-point, and did early mareting and started building an email list (of 3,400 people). After 6 months he had the alpha built, and did a slow launch, only announcing Drip to a few of the users in the email list over time to make sure there were no bugs that would hurt user retention. Rob also ran Ads to build the email list. When he launched he had $8,000 MRR and stagnated because he didn’t have product-market-fit yet.

    • When people say “this is too expensive”, rather than decreasing the price, ask them how you could make your product better and make the price worth it.

    • Imposter syndrome will creep up on you: Despite all Rob’s success, he felt like an imposter when his business “Drip’s” growth had been stagnating for months.

    • Listen to your gut: Sometimes customers will tell you to build stuff into your product that doesn’t align with the vision.

    • Rob went through a lot of stress and depression-like feelings through his career.

    • It takes time: Rob says that it takes a long time to build SaaS apps. He also says that the Venture Capital model is to “throw a bunch of money at the business and try to compress time.”

    • Advice for beginners: Know that it’s going to be harder than you think. And start small (Rob’s first app generated $24,000 per year. Rob also says that if he tried to start Drip in his early days, he would have likely crashed and burned because he lacked the knowledge, experience, and money.)

  2. 1

    Another good episode! Would be great if there was a similar accelerator based in the UK.

    1. 1

      Check out Tyler Tringas' Earnest Capital. They offer a similar VC route in Europe as well as the US.

  3. 1

    good episode!

  4. 1

    Interesting. Must be different in the US, I charge £45+ ph in the UK (about $58). Looks like I must double my hourly rate...

  5. 1

    This was a great episode! Courtland asked great questions to keep Rob talking. There was a not lot knowledge drop in this episode.

  6. 1

    Enjoyed hearing the whole story in one shot. Love the authenticity and humility.

  7. 1

    Thanks Rob, insightful

  8. 1

    This comment was deleted 5 years ago.

  9. 1

    This comment was deleted 5 years ago.

  10. 1

    This comment was deleted 5 years ago.