Should I quit my FAANG job to try and start a startup? Part of me thinks that it'll be fun and motivating. The other part thinks the grass is just greener, especially since I have no idea what I want to start.
Feeling a bit lost. Anyone else in this position?
Having an idea helps, but be wary of working on ideas on the side, you likely have signed an invention assignment agreement with your employer.
I have too many ideas, all great, but seem to lack focus and motivation although running out of money should be enough....but aint?
I guess "startup" isn't what I'm after per se but more of some simple very vertical SaaS I could code up myself like time sheets, scheduling, proj mgmt, journaling etc.. why? I can't deal with deal people/employees at the moment for many obvious reasons. I should be able to create something where I could launch and maintain myself.
I'm looking for something that is.. 1. minimal administration w/o needing a physical location 2. self servicing platform where content is user generated 3. fee based, no ads
I'm trying to get motivated by watching these adventurous people: https://www.indiehackers.com/businesses
Time is of the essences so I need to get moving on it. however, hard when I only have a 1-2hr window max a day after 10pm provided he sleeps through the night :(
My current and possibly the idea I may implement: A private social network, necessity is mother of all inventions. I'm need a way to share my kid with extended family that isn't IG/FB/Whatsapp etc.. I want something more closed, personal, grandmother tested and very private. The common denominator is it needs to work on very under powered tablets running Android 4.0.
Writing up a mini bizplan then wireframe then proto it as a PWA. No one these days uses a PC.
Hit me up for mutual motivation? lakota @ gmail
You don't actually have creative freedom. Your freedom is limited to what makes money right away, or what pleases investors. If you meet an angel who wants blockchain, you better get to work on that chain.
Maybe freelancing is the way to go, or working at a startup.
But if you want to start a startup because it's on your bucket list, then go ahead. Make sure you have some runway. Recession is a great time to start companies, because a lot of really smart people will be looking for jobs, and you'll be contributing more to society by creating them.
IMO, avoiding burnout might not be a best motivator for starting up. Maybe moving to a startup might help you decide along with reducing zoom calls hopefully :). Also it gives time to think about what is that you want to create.
Another option is to talk to friends who started up, to understand the practical challenges.
My suggestion, take some time and decide. It is more about making an informed decision. And when we are lost, sometimes we take decisions more on hope.
I founded a startup before Google, so I know what it takes. I just don't really know how to go from 0 to 1 right now. My mind is also muddled with taking time off and thinking of an idea, or if I should just take time off and come back to a new team at Google, or join a different company. But, I also feel like I'm capable of building my own future with a startup.
I'm at a fantastic startup after leaving amazon and couldn't be happier about what I'm working on or the people I work with.
However, if I was facing burn-out currently and had $10-20k in my emergency fund I'd 100% just wait out covid for at least a year.
Leaving FAANG was the best thing I've done in the past 4 years, best of luck recovering and re-charging from your burn-out my friend!
You need to distinguish between burnout and working at a dead end job (Sorry to say FAANG are dead ends)
Take three months off, companies allow this. Once your burnout is reversed after a month in, you will get your answer
I've been working in a soul crushing job for the past 4 or 5 years. I feel burnt out. Sometimes I get a brief respite when I switch to new project or team, but I quickly become disillusioned as I realize the new team/project has the same issues as the past ones. I just grit my teeth, hate my life from 8 to 4, and continue on.
I would only quit if you have a good plan or idea, or if a new job becomes available.
You've got more personal experience with this than I do. But I would think it's a bad idea on a personal level if COVID wfh is the main cause for your burnout. I'd find founding a startup to be more isolating that working at a company right now.