12
5 Comments

3 types of hard work only indie hackers will understand: Unfamiliar, emotional, and never-ending, and how to manage each one.

submitted this link on October 31, 2022
  1. 2

    Amazingly helpful! I get so tired being an entrepreneur and have found it hard to always understand why, especially when the tasks I do, don't necessarily seem like they should be mentally challenging. But you make such a great point that there are different types of hard work. Thanks for helping me recognise this, and for providing solutions : )

  2. 2

    This is sooooooooooo true. Try explaining to a person in a non-creative industry what you've done all day, and they'll be like 'oh so you JUST had a brainstorming session, wrote some ideas on post-its and then blogged a bit'. As if it's the easiest thing in the world. Being an indie maker is HARD WORK. The decision fatigue and emotional stress you get from being creative is unparalleled to anything I experienced in a non-creative 9-5. Thanks for drawing attention to this!

  3. 1

    This definitely resonates, and probably applies to business founders in any industry - even if the primary task at hand is manual labour.

    As a founder, the sheer cognitive load of being self-directed all the time can be very challenging. Even as the most proactive employee in a corporate job, nothing compares.

  4. 1

    Yeah i totally agree everything seems easy till you try it then you are stuck but as a CEO of a dev company criov.com i have to build a community
    Good luck to all of us

  5. 1

    Thanks for posting that @rmondo! I wrote that piece, so I'm happy to field any questions.

Trending on Indie Hackers
Stop Building Features: Why 80% of Your Roadmap is a Waste of Time User Avatar 100 comments Stop Spamming Reddit for MRR. It’s Killing Your Brand (You need Claude Code for BuildInPublic instead) User Avatar 72 comments How to build a quick and dirty prototype to validate your idea User Avatar 51 comments The Quiet Positioning Trick Small Products Use to Beat Bigger Ones User Avatar 39 comments I Thought AI Made Me Faster. My Metrics Disagreed. User Avatar 37 comments I spent 6 hours writing 12 mediocre onboarding emails. So I built a system that does it in 45 minutes. User Avatar 13 comments