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Make Money from Helping People to Unsubscribe Emails

In this issue, I interview @dinkydani from Leavemealone.app and Kaito Cunningham from Usespred.com. Learn how they started their businesses and grow them. You can surely find some good ideas for your own product.

Key Takeaways for Young Makers


  • Focus on getting to ramen profitability asap

  • Keep your costs low

    • leverage lower costs of living if you can

    • choose tools that keeps your costs low

    • every dollar counts towards whether you make a profit or loss

  • If you're not happy working on a side project, you won't be running it as a business

  • Find good ideas by working on your own problems or dilemmas

  • Don't be afraid to pivot to a better idea if you have to

  • There are complementary alternatives to the subscription model

    • Use a proxy currency that that has value to the user

    • Credits (Leave Me Alone)

    • Free 100 subscribers (Convert Kit)

    • These can be useful for creating referral programs

  • Leverage different social channels to build an audience

    • use them to do customer interviews or market validation

    • use them to drive traffic for early user acquisition

Try these for yourself


  • Implement a proxy currency (credits, free subscribers, etc)

  • Start a new account on a social media platform (TikTok, Instagram)

  • Post at least 1 thing daily on your social media

  • Pivot that idea which you can't seem to find happiness in

  • List 5 problems / dilemmas you have and interview 10 strangers. Ask if you billed them now, would they give you their credit card? If yes, build it.

  • Cut any unnecessary costs now (don't spend on what doesn't create profit)

  • Start experimenting with charging your users


Helping People to Unsubscribe Emails


What did you make your first profit on?

I'm the founder of Leave Me Alone, a service to easily unsubscribe from unwanted emails. Leave Me Alone is my flagship product and primary focus, but it wasn't where my first maker-made dollar came from.

I'm a digital nomad and full-time traveller. For the past 3 years I have been travelling full-time with @jivings. He's my partner, best friend, and fellow developer. We founded our web development agency Squarecat while on the road. We freelance sometimes, but our main focus is working on our own products. Our goal is to reach ramen profitability.

Ramen profitability means that we want to make enough money from our own products. Enough to live a comfortable life. As we spend most of the year in South East Asia we only need to make $2,000 a month to support us both very comfortably!

The first time we made any money from our own products was a couple of years ago. We had been trying to find our niche and we were experimenting with different things. We had a few ideas on the go, but our first profit came from UptimeBar. It was a simple OSX menu bar app that notifies you if any of your websites go down. It cost $5 for a license key and we put it live hoping for the best.

And... Someone bought it! When that first person paid, it was the best feeling in the world. We weren't quite on track for ramen profitability, but it was a step in the right direction. UptimeBar went on to make a few hundred dollars. We started then to focus on another idea that has now become our main focus and flagship product. This product is Leave Me Alone.

Leave Me Alone has averaged over $1,000 a month for the past year or so. Most of our revenue comes from one-time purchases. This makes our monthly revenue somewhat uncertain!

When did you decide to pivot?

Building UptimeBar was a fun experiment that gave us a chance to learn. We learnt how to build native OSX apps using Electron. But we didn't feel like we were solving a big problem with UptimeBar like we are with Leave Me Alone. We didn't enjoy the long build and deployment process when making changes. Or the Apple Developer licence costs to have a verified app.

We never got around to publishing UptimeBar to the app store because of the work involved. In summary, it was too much effort and not enough enjoyment. The limited development possibilities that meant we started looking at building another product.

Why did you make that product?

James and I spend a lot of time managing our emails, and neither of us enjoys it very much. Unfortunately, it's necessary to run a business. One thing that was getting out of control was the number of emails that plagued us. Marketing emails, newsletters and other subscription emails kept coming in. This was happening on our personal accounts. But our company email addresses were more public. They were in contact us links and on our websites etc. It was overwhelming our business emails too.

We searched for a service that would help us to clear out our inboxes from all the junk so that we could start again. We found a few that would help us for free, but as we are conscious of privacy. Given the rise in data-selling scandals, we check the products we use carefully. A closer inspection of these other services revealed disturbing facts. They made money by scraping and selling all our data for marketing.

Now, we have a dilemma of overwhelmed inboxes. Or having our information sold to marketing giants. We decided to make our own solution.

If you don't mind sharing, how much did you make?

We keep our expenses low so our profit margins are actually pretty high. We spend around $80 a month on infrastructure and services. Currently, we don't have any budget for marketing, so once Stripe has taken their fees then the rest is profit. You can see our expenses on our open page too!

How did you decide on the business model?

Our business model is credit-based pricing where one unsubscribe costs one credit. If we fail to unsubscribe for any reason then it doesn't cost any credits. This has several advantages. Customers can purchase the number of credits they need for the size of the mailbox. Credits never expire so customers can return anytime. They can return and unsubscribe from more emails in the future. It also allows us to incentivize social media engagement and repeat business. We can do all that by offering free credits for these actions.

We are often asked why we don't change it to a monthly subscription. But we don't believe that is in our customers best interests. This means that people don't need to return monthly to unsubscribe from emails. People do a big unsubscribe and can then set a reminder to return in a few months to clear out new subscriptions. Paying monthly for a service like Leave Me Alone doesn't benefit the user. We wrote a blog post about our pricing model here.

We do have a monthly subscription for small teams and businesses who get unlimited unsubscribes. This is aimed at teams who rely on emails to do their job and where any unwanted distractions and time wasted from extra emails and unsubscribing results in lost time and money.

Where is the product now?

Leave Me Alone has been stable and profitable for more than a year now. We are always adding new features to make it better at unsubscribing. We are currently working on adding support for more languages. We are also adding support for more complex unsubscribe flows. Our goal is that every difficult unsubscribe taking many steps and time will be gone. All with a single click in Leave Me Alone. As always, we are sharing our ideas and progress on Twitter and on our blog.

Any tips on keeping costs down?

Choose tools that will keep costs low. It's easy to do tasks manually until the need to scale is too great. Most founders and indie hackers are bootstrapping themselves to profitability. Especially in the beginning. A few extra dollars a month on additional services or unnecessary tools could be the difference between profit or loss.

What are you working on now?

Leave Me Alone as always!


Questions for Readers

Which advice are you going to apply next? Share your thoughts and bounce some ideas together!
What do you think of Danielle's story – what inspires you?


Note: If you like what you read, could I entice you to check out my newsletter where I share more actionable advice for makers trying to get their first profits

posted to Icon for group Growth
Growth
on May 16, 2020
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    How did they get their first customers?

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