The general rule I've heard is: no matter what you do, you'll get it wrong. The only variable you can control is how wrong you are.
We're a team of 4, all working part-time, and getting ready to launch. A few other variables in the pipeline (people moving, marriage, etc.) but for the most part, something similar to four equal partners. Three technical, and one non-technical co-founder. SaaS.
Would love your thoughts and insights on how to be least wrong in creating this for the first time.
I work as a photographer & videographer right now, and editing and reviewing video is a painful process. Going back and forth with clients and involved parties sucks, so I came up with a possible solution and didn't think much of it.
A few weeks ago while photographing a tech conference, I decided to join the hackathon and build an idea I had with my friend. He did all the heavy back-end lifting, and I did the front end work. We didn't know what would come out of it, but ended up winning 'Most Monetizeable' and getting great feedback from all of the judges and many participants.
Long story short, my friend has stated that he has absolutely no intention of wanting to work on it (he's already at a startup) and has agreed to me continuing to work on it without his help. I've showed potential customers the demo, and have received great feedback from other videographers, including a value of $100~ per project as a baseline.
I want to continue with it, but am not sure what to do. I don't have the programming skills to do all of the back end right now (node.js) but am willing to learn it. At the same time, the alpha (if you can call it that) is basically done, and doesn't need too much work before it can go live.
Thoughts?