5
Likes
11 Comments

Things You Learn from Starting 23 Businesses with "Parallel Founder" Danielle Baskin

Episode #093

Danielle Baskin (@djbaskin) gets really excited about new ideas. So excited, in fact, that she can't resist bringing them to life by making them into products. Then turning those products into businesses. Then never shutting those businesses down. In this episode, Danielle shares the lessons she's learned starting 23 businesses since 2007 and continuing to run all of them in parallel, indefinitely.

Show Notes

  1. 2

    Wow, what an episode!

  2. 2

    My Main Takeaways:

    • Just build side-projects, you never know what they can grow into: Danielle says most of her ideas were accidental, she just put them out there to see what would happen, and then people wanted that thing, so it was a surprise to her… she hasn’t needed to shut any of her businesses down, so she “toggles businesses on and off”
    • As an Indie Hacker, your exact day job does not really matter: Danielle has never worked a 9-5 job. She’s had “weird” jobs (i.e. a Philosopher’s assistant, and a Scenic Painter for an Opera House). All the while working these jobs, she was working on her side-projects, and now her side-projects support her full-time.
    • Embody the mindset of an entrepreneur: Seek ways you can solve problems everywhere you go. Danielle is always coming up with new entrepreneurial ideas and executing on them. For example, in 2007 when she started her entrepreneur journey, she began selling customly designed helmets for $50-60 dollars, because people began taking interest in the helmets she’d wear herself (that she also happened to design herself).
    • Money isn’t always the motivator: Danielle was motivated by her enjoyment of what she was doing (i.e. painting helmets), more than she was motivated by the money she would get for it.
    • Solve your own problems: Danielle is good at identifying her own problems, solving them, and letting others who have her problem know that she’s solved it.
    • Be resourceful: Danielle is skilled at making the most of what she currently has/knows to quickly produce something in the shortest time frame possible.
    • Be creative with your marketing efforts: To advertise her new bicycle-handle-phone-holder business, Danielle would go to crowded bike parks and stick a leaflet on the bike handles, while no one was there.
    • Go out and meet people: Danielle met a guy at a co-working space who had a cousin in Bangladesh that owned a small shoe factory. She leveraged this to develop a few of her product samples in that factory in Bangladesh.
    • To be a Parallel Entrepreneur: Fire yourself from your own company and hire someone else to run it once you have the workflows sorted: This way you can begin working on your next idea.
    • Launch your idea with a low-cost MVP to validate it: Know who your end user is before investing lots of time and money into a product that no one will buy.
    • You can sell things directly through Instagram: You don’t even need a website to have an ecommerce store anymore.
    • If you’re a maker or artist, Sell and Market your stuff: A lot of makers and artists never pull the trigger and never try to market or sell their work, so they miss out.
    • Not having a lot of job opportunities in your industry is also a blessing: Not having job opportunities forces you think more entrepreneurially. For example, Danielle’s industry, art and design, isn’t as big as a software developer’s industry, so Danielle finds ways to make money for herself using her creativity.
    • Be careful when turning your hobby or passion into a job, you may hate it: Danielle used to love painting, she started making money by painting and selling helmets, she painted thousands of helmets over 4 years and eventually began hating painting. She burnt out, took a year off, and now feels the desire to paint again.
    • Ride trends: Danielle made a battery that looked like a Pokeball from Pokemon during the Pokemon-Go craze. She sold lots of them. She did this for a short amount of time (a week), then shut it down.
    • Have fun: Danielle made a landing page as a joke, it was one of her business ideas called “Drone Sweaters”, which are sweaters for drones. It went viral on the internet, and companies would request her services for their drones. (See also: The Cloud Appreciation Society, a group of people who appreciate clouds. Membership is $40-60 annually, and it has over 30,000 members)
    • Journalists love weird, funny, controversial stories: Danielle says that if you have a normal but useful product, it’ll be harder to get press, than it would be if you have a weird non-useful product.
    • Focus on the long-term: Danielle wished she focused on the long term vision of her helmet company, rather than focusing on the short-term needs of the company. You may have to reject short term things like money, in order to remain in alignment with the long-term vision of the company
    • Advice for beginners: Launch before it’s perfect, perfection doesn’t exist. And you don’t need lots of money to start something, keep it minimal, low-cost, and launch.
    1. 1

      Nice summary

    2. 1

      Amazing summary!

      1. 1

        Thanks :)

  3. 1

    Danielle is too clever. Enjoyed her perspective. Logo on fruits... brilliant. My hobby is also buying domain names and creating landing pages... lol.

    1. 1

      What marketing do you do after you've built the landing pages? Any notable results?

  4. 1

    Amazing. With some luck, Dialup could be a sweeping succes. Keep going!

    Edit: when heard in the podcast I thought it was "Dialog", had to come to IH to find what it was actually called.

    1. 1

      Dialog would also be a suitable name to be honest, using dialup to have dialog with strangers.

    2. 1

      Me too I had to come to this page to check out the name of the app. Tried it yesterday but no-one picked up the phone!

  5. 1

    Hi there, I thought I'd leave a note just in case. The last few seconds of the audio seem clipped, when Danielle leaves her contact details. Other than that, great episode! Looking forward to the next one ;)

  6. 1

    It was great getting to know Danielle. I too cannot just create one product. I will be learning more about her.