| What are your standards for including interviews on Indie Hackers though? Honestly, my criticisms are less of Sebastian than of you. He admits that his strategy is unlikely to be profitable in the long run, but what exactly is the merit of including stories about an amateur trader on a site about technical side projects? I, and likely many others in this thread, have tried our hand at trading. I've had months where I generated amazing profits. I have "algorithms." Yet I definitely don't pretend any of this stuff is special or noteworthy—why would Sebastian's be? A huge part of what's cool about Indie Hackers is that people are generally transparent and you can see their approach to roughly similar problems. There are plenty of sites (hundreds of them) where you can find people bragging about their trading strategies and bots. Why does Indie Hackers have to expand into them? This is nothing like the SubmitHub interview. That had lots of great lessons in customer development, building a brand over the years, etc. Realistically the only lesson from this story is "get lucky." > In fact, I enumerated some of them as asides in the interview itself, none of which would apply to your hypothetical trip to Vegas. Why not? I'm sure I could come up with some trite lessons about how poker playing is applicable to business and startups. Heck, there's a whole cottage industry in doing so. That doesn't mean I think a story about my poker playing would make a good Indie Hackers interview. > money-making machine has succeeded (answer: obviously not), and ignoring the actual point of the interview What, exactly is the point of the interview then? You could just as well cover random sites that have launched with 0 profit or revenue. Heck, if you're in that business, I've got a ton of side projects I'd love to share. I'm trying not to be too critical here, as I genuinely like Indie Hackers. But you need to have some standards for what gets included. Everyone who manages to make money doing something shouldn't count. |
In this particular case, the amount of time and effort an 18 year old put into researching and educating himself about a difficult field is quite inspiring. As is his dedication to doing some non-trivial programming work and actually launching. That might not be inspiring to you or to professional traders on HN, but I can assure you that most IH readers will not care if/when his trading bot ultimately fails.
> What, exactly is the point of the interview then? You could just as well cover random sites that have launched with 0 profit or revenue. Heck, if you're in that business, I've got a ton of side projects I'd love to share.
I've featured lots of very small projects. My minimum cutoff nowadays is $100/mo, but in the past I've done interviews where the revenue was $0 or not shared. Although it's fun celebrating big revenue wins, that's not the point of the site. (If you don't believe me, I can point to numerous places where people have actually asked me to feature $0 failure stories on the site.) The point is motivation, inspiration, and education for getting around the most common obstacles that stand in the way of creating an online business.