12
4 Comments

From Our Desks: Making the Community Great Again

A weekly tell-all from the people behind Indie Hackers. This week, we talk build-in-public leaderboards, drama at Postmark, founder burnout, and more.

A three-panel image showing founders and products talked about in the article.

Welcome to From Our Desks, where the people behind Indie Hackers share the stories behind the headlines. This week, we talk build-in-public leaderboards, drama at Postmark, and founder burnout.


@StephenFlanders (Stephen Flanders, journalist): The John Rush and Jason Cohen debate over directories solidified in my mind how pointless it is to build B2B software. Think about it. The options are try to validate your idea with directory #100000, or spend months building “valuable” software that has probably already been built a million times before. 

Not exactly enticing.

Meanwhile, there are consumer founders making tens of thousands of dollars basically overnight because they are funny on TikTok. So, build another SEO tool that will never go anywhere or build a LooksMaxing app that retires your bloodline? Super tough choice there.

B2B indie hacking is largely dead, and AI isn’t going to bring it back. Skate to where the puck’s heading, not where it already is.

@ChanningAllen (Channing Allen, co-founder and editor-in-chief): One of the downsides of our transition from community business to media company is that it's harder these days for indie hackers to contribute to the website.

We still have an online forum, but forum posts don't have much of a presence on our homepage compared to our in-house journalism. Which is by design, of course — our media company is steadily growing in revenue and subscribers month-over-month — but we also recognize that a core part of our identity is the Indie Hackers community, and it's been a bit of a bummer watching community activity flow increasingly away from the site to X and Bluesky, etc.

So we've done a lot of work to evolve the product leaderboard into The Build Board, a daily leaderboard of build-in-public posts, which is now featured prominently on the homepage.

@krhignett (Katie Hignett, journalist): I took a little break from AI coverage this week to finish up a report on transactional email service Postmark. It’s been a favorite among indie hackers for years, but more and more founders seem to be reporting issues with the service. Get in touch if you think you might have some insight into the issue.

We’re not trying to write hatchet jobs with our original reporting. But we are interested when companies aren’t serving bootstrappers as well as they could, or as well as they used to. When they’re forgetting about the little guy, if you will.

Have any tips or think we should be looking into something in particular? Send us an email at [email protected].

@IndieJames (James Fleischmann, journalist): This week, I interviewed two founders who are, by any standard, wildly successful. Both spoke enthusiastically about the importance of expanding into enterprise clientele.

Be warned: This is not a simple matter of adding a new tier with a “Contact Us” button instead of a “Pay Now” button.

It’s a new market, which means you need to find product-market fit again. We're talking new features. New loads/stress (I’m talking about your tech here, but it applies emotionally too!). New messaging. Outbound sales. White-glove service. Even big pivots…

It’s an entirely different ballgame that — if done well — can take you to the major leagues.

It also brings a layer of risk, particularly when a single big customer is keeping you afloat. That’s why one of these founders is currently diversifying. But that’s a good problem to have.

Start small, but always keep an eye upmarket.

@Michal_kanka (Michal Kankowski, journalist): The grind and burnout story hit close to home for me. Over the past few years, I’ve faced burnout 2–3 times. Trust me, it’s no walk in the park. The first time? Man, it nearly broke me. But getting through hell taught me how tough I really am — and how to deal with it better. Turns out, practice makes perfect.

Another thing I poured a lot of energy into this week was diving into the dating scene of Indie Hackers. Honestly? Way more hopeful than I expected! I mean, I’ve been in a long-term relationship for years, and so have big names like Levelsio, Tibo, and Marc. But, I've always assumed most Indie Hackers were single. But boy, was I off! Turns out, 60% of Indie Hackers are in relationships! It really flips the stereotype on its head. Huh...

Anyway, this week’s been a rollercoaster — burnout lessons, Indie Hacker love stats, and a ton of caffeine-fueled late nights.

@zerotousers (Darko Gjorgjievski, journalist): The pace at which the AI field is moving is crazy. That's what I've mainly paid attention to.

Google releasing Gemini 2. Claude making Haiku 3.5 more generally available. OpenAI's 12 days of ship-mas.

And it's not (yet) the end of the week.

Photo of Channing Allen Channing Allen

Channing Allen is the co-founder of Indie Hackers, where he helps share the stories, business ideas, strategies, and revenue numbers from the founders of profitable online businesses. Originally started in 2016, Indie Hackers would go on to be acquired by Stripe in 2017. Then in 2023, Channing and his co-founder spun Indie Hackers out of Stripe to return to their roots as a truly indie business.

Photo of Katie Hignett Katie Hignett

Katie is a journalist for Indie Hackers who specializes in tech, startups, exclusive investigations, and breaking news. She's written for Forbes, Newsweek, and more. She's also an indie hacker herself, working on EasyFOI.

Photo of Stephen Flanders Stephen Flanders

Stephen Flanders is an Indie Hackers journalist and a professional writer who covers all things tech and startups. His work is read by millions of readers daily and covers industries from crypto and AI to startups and entrepreneurship. In his free time, he is building his own WordPress plugin, Raffle Leader.

Photo of James Fleischmann James Fleischmann

I've been writing for Indie Hackers for the better part of a decade. In that time, I've interviewed hundreds of startup founders about their wins, losses, and lessons. I'm also the cofounder of dbrief (AI interview assistant) and LoomFlows (customer feedback via Loom). And I write two newsletters: SaaS Watch (micro-SaaS acquisition opportunities) and Ancient Beat (archaeo/anthro news).

Photo of Michal Kankowski Michal Kankowski

Michal is a journalist for Indie Hackers. He's also the founder of Kickstart Side Hustle, a platform for startup founders and marketers with the biggest library of the most creative (often viral) marketing case studies in history, and hundreds of marketing psychology principles.

Photo of Darko Gjorgjievski Darko Gjorgjievski

Darko is a journalist for Indie Hackers and an entrepreneur. He writes about AI and acquisition channels that work for founders. He runs a newsletter called Growth Trends where he curates news items focused on user acquisition and new product ideas.

  1. 1

    What a post, a true life in a working environment, whether fully busy or partially, it shows life is a rollercoaster and we as individuals keep our minds open to gain valuable lessons and apply accordingly.

  2. 1

    ​The article highlights Indie Hackers' efforts to revitalize community engagement by introducing features these initiatives aim to foster a more interactive and supportive environment for indie entrepreneurs.​

  3. 1

    Community of the right people is everything. :)

  4. 1

    This is a very interesting article. Love the focus on community growth, tackling burnout, and evolving the Build Board. Excited to see how these changes shape the Indie Hackers space.