Question: What do Craigslist and Albert Einstein have in common?
Answer: Their big idea started as a side project.
1905. Albert Einstein worked six days a week full-time in an office, examining patent applications. He dedicated all his remaining hours to studying and experimenting with physics. One day, the Theory Of Relativity was conceived — completely off-the-clock.
1993. Craig Newmark, employed at an investment company, started an email list in his spare time to allow him and his friends to update each other about different events in town. Eventually, the list grew so much that there wasn’t enough space in people’s inboxes: it was time for a website. Enter Craigslist.com.
2018. A small sideline has the potential to morph into something huge. With reliable internet access and enough devotion, a nugget of gold becomes a rainbow.
Many of the world’s most successful companies started as an afterthought in someone’s spare hours, while the ‘real work’ chugged on in the background.
Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Uber, Product Hunt, Unsplash, Pinterest, GrowthHackers, Groupon, Trello, AppSumo, Etsy, Hubspot, Gmail, WeWork, Buffer… The list goes on and on.
Even Apple was born in a garage, not an office. College dropouts Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak could only work on their DIY personal computers AFTER their 9–5 had finished.
Something brewing behind the scenes can turn into your life’s work.
The story of my startup followed a similar path.
I started building products as a hobby in college.
While working full-time as a programmer, I patched together pockets of time to water and trim my fledgling products. It wasn’t until five years later that I quit my day job and went all-in.
Back then in my dorm room, I could never have predicted that one of my products, JotForm, would reach 3.2 million users and 100 employees today — without receiving a single dime of outside funding.
When a project first calls your name, who knows where it will take you?
It may inform or enrich your core business. It may transform your core business.
And sometimes, it will BECOME your core business.
There once was a multiplayer game called Glitch. Glitch was not a success. In fact, it was doing so badly that its founders decided to shut it down altogether.
On the cusp of despair, they contemplated the internal chat system they had been building for fun while developing the game. It was clunky, but functional.
With nothing to lose, they decided to launch the chat as a product in itself.
Slack was born — and it became the fastest-growing business app in history.
If you’ve got a side project that beckons, what’s stopping you?
Side projects increase creativity
A buzzing side project will not take anything away from your business. It will energize it.
After Google launched its 20 percent rule (employees are encouraged to spend 20% of their time exploring side projects), the result was that the remaining 80% became more productive.
Sometimes, they can even land you your dream job.
Running a business inevitably generates pressure and anxiety. People need to be paid. You need to perform. There is pressure to succeed.
Not so with your side project. It isn’t keeping you afloat; if it fails, no one will drown.
It’s a pressure-free playing field.
And pressure-free playing fields are where the magic happens.
Even the giants can’t resist toying with sidelines that can seem improbable. Disney is dabbling in robot creation; Tesla is starting an energy company; Amazon is getting into groceries.
Ready to play? Here are a few must-knows — especially if you harbour hopes of your baby project growing into an adolescent startup, or even a grown-up business.
Find the time
Scratch that. You will never ‘find’ the time. Long uninterrupted hours in which you can devote yourself to your heart’s content to a side project don’t exist.
Nor do you need them. Side projects grow in small but frequent windows that barely make a dent in your day but add up over weeks and months.
Take me as an example. I didn’t let full-time work stop me from improving JotForm; I’d wake up everyday at 6am, answer customer questions, then head off to my ‘real job’.
Everyone has leftover minutes in their day.
Secure those pockets of time. Protect them in the way you protect other things that you prioritize. Don’t double-book them in your diary. Put a ‘do-not-disturb’ sign on your door.
At the same time, don’t put too much pressure on yourself in terms of setting deadlines. This is the area of your life to be expansive, not restrictive.
Kevan Lee of Buffer knows side projects march to a different beat than 9-to-5 work. They target a separate part of the brain and therefore follow their own rules. His #1 rule? Be ok with missing deadlines.
Just go and hang out with your project. Make it like date night.
Finding the need: deliver extreme value
Finding a pain point to soothe, an unmet need or an unfilled gap doesn’t have to be something complex or fancy.
A quick glance at ‘The 1,000 Upvote Club’ on Product Hunt shows that the most-appreciated ideas are often neither of those things.
Remember the side project advocate Crew? Their story seemed like a textbook startup nightmare, until their side project, Unsplash, turned it into a dream-come-true.
Their dedicated ‘Labs’ page offers ‘tools for the creative community’. It shows the company asked itself that vital question:
What can we give something valuable away in order to sell something related?
Your starting point? Putting yourself in your customers’ shoes.
What makes their journey less than smooth? What gets in the way, or what takes too much time? What is still too complicated?
We’re not talking about a key part of your core business. We’re assuming that that’s in place.
We’re talking about a generous extra to surprise and delight. A free gift to your customer that emerges from the independent pursuit of an idea.
Make it fun
A project that isn’t loved will face-plant quickly. That’s because you’ll find lots of reasons not to spend time on it (and there are always reasons). That, in turn, will make your project wilt.
Droopy projects aren’t fun. You will become demotivated and resentful of the time you do spend on it.
In fact, side projects should always be “stupid”, says former Spotify designer and side project champion Tobias van Schneider:
“The only way a side project will work is if people give themselves permission to think simple, to change their minds, to fail — basically, to not take them too seriously.
When you treat something like it’s stupid, you have fun with it, you don’t put too much structure around it. You can enjoy different types of success.”
So make it something that you’re into. Because, for the time being, the enjoyment and satisfaction that you get out of your project will be your only reward.
Or, as Huit Denim Co puts it:
“A side project is a Labor of Love. You provide the ‘Labor’. And you provide the ‘Love’.
So when you spend time on it, it is because you really want to. That keeps you coming back and pushing it on.”
Relax with imperfection
So you’ve showed up (and keep showing up). And it’s fun. But it feels messy. You don’t know where it’s going. Some aspects feel plain wrong.
That’s just right for a side project.
The rest of your life may be about meeting goals, targets and expectations.
This part isn’t. It’s your time to play, tinker, try things out, and wander down paths that don’t have a clear destination.
Wanting to get somewhere in as little time as possible is the surest way to kill off inspiration of any kind.
The best way to approach a side project is as an experiment, rather than something with a clear-cut goal.
Paul Jarvis, creative entrepreneur and author of ‘Company of One’, explains:
“Experiments don’t “fail” — they simply prove or disprove a hypothesis. So focus on the task at hand. Not the end result.”
If you are a bootstrapped startup like JotForm that is profitable, you have the freedom to experiment abundantly.
With no investors breathing down our neck, we can take as many fun risks as we please — and we do.
It’s great to dream big. But becoming hyper-focused on the results and success of your side project can end in paralysis — and bitter resentment when things don’t go to plan.
Because when it comes to side projects, things usually don’t go to plan. That’s what makes them so exciting.
So go in without expectations and see what happens.
Something always does.
P.S
Don’t be scared to invest time and effort into something that truly makes you tick. It won’t distract you or tire you out; it will energize you.
Worst case scenario, you sate your curiosity.
Best case scenario, you discover your life’s work.
But either way, don’t worry too much.
After all, it’s only a side project.
Thanks for all the datapoints and your success with JotForm is inspirational.
I found the nights and weekends thing didn't work for me after 3.5 years of giving it my best. There are definitely reasons for that and I have figured out what they are. I'm currently investing a year in going full time on indie hacking and the strategy is to basically round out the skills and abilities that I never could address while trying to ship things in my after hours, with the view to either build a ramen profitabile gig inside the 12 months OR (and this is the hedge) build my skills, abilities and software capital to the point where I can successfully research, launch and market things in my after hours. Looking at all of what I have learned since going full time I just never would have learned some of the most important things that I have learned because the incentives were different, the focus was different and going all in has helped me laser focus on the right things.
This is truly amazing and gave me SO much perspective!!
Thank you!!
Reading this helped me audit my projects and goals and helped me to see where I was putting too much undue pressure. I am going to have to reread this a couple times to remind myself of the greater picture when I feel like my side projects aren't working out or that I don't have enough time...
It also gave me a better appreciation for my podcast! Its messy, but its so fun to do and I always look forward to podcast day. 😁😍
https://www.spreaker-beta.com/show/2094875
Thanks again!!
Couldn't agree more the sentiment here; moonlighting is a hedge that allows you to test yourself, your market, and your product without serious risk. I've done it successfully and would do it again in a heartbeat to manage risk of starting a new business. My transition was full time job -> consulting -> full time on the startup as revenue ramped.
JotForm is my dream business!
Thanks a lot for the inspiration, "So go in without expectations and see what happens." it's the best phrase to me.
So legit 🙌🙌🙌🙌 thanks for sharing
Thanks for sharing Aytekin. I'm going through this phase right now where I've become equally committed to both lifestyles. It demands lots of discipline and energy, but the rewards are there as soon as you start building new skills and pushing yourself to new boundaries.
It's a wonderful thing ... to find that one project that you love.
Good article and very motivational!!
I would just like that it is ok, if this is not the way for everyone though. Some just might not have the energy to work in the mornings or at night. Or some (including me) need longer times in a row to work on something in contrast to some work here and there.
So don't stress yourself, if you can't build a startup on the side of your day job. If it's not for you, but you have the feeling you should be succeeding with your side project it will just add pressure and make you unhappier.
This comment was deleted 3 years ago.