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Creating an Ecosystem for Millions by Building for Yourself with Taylor Otwell of Laravel

Episode #137

When Taylor Otwell (@taylorotwell) first sat down to create Laravel, he had no idea it would be the seed of an ecosystem that would revitalize an entire programming language. He was just building it for himself. In the years to come, his "build it for myself" strategy would continue to pay off, resulting in numerous million-dollar products such as Forge, Envoy, Spark, and Nova. In this episode Taylor and I discuss his strategy for turning his own problems into a source of product ideas; how to have extraordinary impact as a solo founder and self-described "regular guy;"and the almost-unfair benefits of building goodwill, trust, and community around your products and ideas.

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    Thanks for the great podcast, thanks Taylor

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    Great podcast!! Does anyone know when Taylor will be releasing the open source web app mentioned in the podcast?

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    So insightful!

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    Great listen!

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    Hi @TaylorOtwell, Thanks, a good episode. I've a bit of feedback on Envoyer's web site.

    Not being a Laravel user but having PHP clients that might be interested in some of the ecosystem's products, I arrived at https://envoyer.io. I think the site would benefit on some written detail on how it works and what it offers. I assume all the detail is in https://laracasts.com/series/envoyer but that has ten episodes totalling 36 minutes.

    Video is a poor mechanism for imparting information if the consumer just wants to skim and search for the parts they're interested in a minute or two. And Google's not too hot at cutting out the answers to questions for its search results either. :-)

    An example of what I mean is https://www.deployhq.com that I think is a similar product. Their front page lists key features and I quickly arrive at https://www.deployhq.com/features/zero-downtime-deployments with the detail I seek.

    Cheers, Ralph.

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      As a bit of clarification: laracasts is a seperate stand-alone product from Laravel and envoyer. Laracasts is run by Jeffrey Way and is a great Laravel learning resource.

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        Thanks, @Scotalia, I didn't know. But given that Envoyer is providing no information on itself other that a list of two-or-three-word features, I guess it's deliberately outsourcing the product description to third-party Laracasts.

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