I'm also kind of tired of working for someone else. I did SEO for 10 years very profitably and it was a dream life.
I was going to take at least one year off to take care of my health and my little one (she's 3) but as my wife correctly pointed out, I go crazy when I don't do something that exercises my brain.
Lost 30 pounds, and been doing a lot of hiking, sports, salsa, which is great, but it's not enough. Finally I understand why rich people seldom retire.
I'm reasonably productive (big fan of Cal Newport, Deep Work, Slow Productivity).
The dream is to have a profitable SaaS but it's been overwhelming to see the amount of stuff out there.
My strengths are FE and I can handle design and marketing reasonably okay. Don't want to brag but likely 90 or 95% top talent doing FE , based on the CTOs and investors we used to work with. I was Eng Manager at some point but hated the endless meetings.
I'm also over the fence with everything related to AI (I think it's powerful, but it's a double-edged sword to build in such a competitive industry that I don't find that enticing and I am not too knowledgeable of).
What would you do in my position if you had 3 years of runway?
That's if we continue spending as we are now (very comfortable living), but it could be extended to 4-5 years if we decide to live a bit on a tighter budget, provided I find a mission on what to build or do.
I know myself, and by the time I only have 1 year of runway I'm going to start stressing out. So I have some time.
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EDIT: My ideas so far.
1) Try a few micro SaaS ideas. Fail a lot and figure it out. FAFO.
2) Grow my socials so I have a bigger network. It's going well but I'm just not a big fan of all the shallow work.
3) Try one or two BIG SaaS ideas. Slow and steady, focus on quality. Very enjoyable but the risk of failing miserably haunts me.
4) Work on open source projects. I have a few that I started and have a tiny bit of traction. If nothing can be done for profit, use it as leverage to find a great job in the future and learn a ton
But, if you nail down a good problem
I’d just focus on finding problems and solving them, while getting people to pay to use them. Don’t overthink it!
You could also look for some part time contracting work in the meantime to keep an income and stay in touch with a professional network.
Congrats on the weight loss and fitness, that’s huge.
If tech alone was enough, Linux would be on everyone's desktop.
The reason it is not is because those involved are for the most part disconnected from and disinterested in the social and humanistic aspects of creating a "product".
I suggest a division of talents. Step away from keyboard and start looking to form an informal partnership with someone who has contacts and inside knowledge of some specific industry.
You focus on the tech, they focus on the business and "humanistic" stuff and you split the profits.
This is what I did over 25 years ago and I have been running my own successful business ever since.