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comment by dublinben
dublinben  ·  988 days ago  ·  link  ·    ·  parent  ·  post: Pubski: July 14, 2021

I don't think you need a few years of experience as a PM in order to pursue your own thing. If you have a good idea, try to just start building it. There's plenty of "no-code" platforms these days, or you could hire some cheap contractors to make you a proof of concept.





ButterflyEffect  ·  988 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Hah, I am not in tech! A lot of the principles are cross platform, but in MFG it’s a bit of a different ballgame to get a product going.

b_b  ·  988 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Are you thinking about a contract manufacturing operation, or actually building your own product (either through invention or licensing)? Obviously manufacturing of any sort of some of the most capital intensive business out there, but there are a lot of local governments who will offer loan guarantees for anyone trying to bring manufacturing to their area. I think it's an awesome idea.

uhsguy  ·  986 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Manufacturing is a low margin high capital and highly regulated business. That’s why the us has so few manufacturing start ups. In tech it’s easy you get a couple people In a garage with computers and you churn out a app it’s mostly just labor cost. If your want to make something you better be buying 50-100k of equipment and have the knowledge on how to run and maintain it, while trying to stay compliant with all the various regs.

kleinbl00  ·  985 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Can confirm. Am at $50-$100k of equipment and three years into the knowledge on how to run and maintain it, and can't download any software anymore without certifying that I am not Iranian. Am under a thousand dollars in revenue.

The only way to make shit in the US is (A) GSA contracts, which is the only reason Haas exists, or (B) niche luxury goods.

My local distiller now makes about 20 different kinds of booze. I don't think they have anything under $50 a bottle, despite the fact that WA craft distillers pay a radically lower liquor tax. They're probably a million five into their operation and I suspect they're starting to break even.