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Distribution is more important than product

At 26, Daniel Ch has already built multiple successful businesses and sold one for a life-changing amount of money.

I caught up with him to understand how he does it. The short answer is that he focuses on distribution over product. šŸ‘‡

So many projects

James: You're only 26, but you've already achieved a lot as a founder. When did you start?

Daniel: I started my first business when I was 15. It was an online shop selling ties, bow ties, etc.

James: When was your first success?

Daniel: My first success was a business I started with my brother in 2017, and it's still alive today: Legit Check By Ch. It's a core piece of our micro-holding company, CH Group.

James: How's it doing?

Daniel: Legit Check has been doing 6 figures per year.

James: Anything else you're working on?

Danel: Simple.ink recently got acquired.

We also run SignHouse (a docusign competitor) and we are launching two more:

  • SaaSPad.co - content+SEO agency for SaaS companies!
  • Guides.ai - simplest and most efficient guides on everything AI

Other than those, we're always working on multiple smaller projects.

James: That's a lot. Why so many projects?

Daniel: I guess it's a cocktail of:

  • Semi-ADHD
  • Impatience, as Iā€™m young
  • The need of spilling my creativity into something
  • An itch
  • A lack of focus!
  • Some sort of boredom
  • An internal "chaseā€
  • Fun

James: How do you do it all?

Daniel: Itā€™s 2 of us - my brother David and I. So we both individually get credit for the effort of 2 people. Thatā€™s the secret.

James: How do you choose what to work on?

Daniel: We pick each project very carefully. Every project has to be able to stand on its own after a certain amount of time. It can't be a ā€œneedyā€ project, as we dont' have the bandwidth.

That said, I'm actually just starting my first needy project in a long time ā€” SaaSPad. But I want to be very careful with it.

James: What's a good example of a project that stands on its own?

Daniel: Simple.ink wasnā€™t a needy project. Website hosting usually means long billing cycles and, besides some initial help, not a lot of customer support. Same goes for SignHouse.

Make a business that can run on its own. Thatā€™s what I always recommend!

Viral loops need lifetime deals

James: How much is SignHouse making?

Daniel: SignHouse is now doing $1,000-$3,000 per month. And $10,000-$20,000 when we're doing campaigns.

James: Why not always run campaigns then?

Daniel: With lifetime deals, we want to be a bit careful. I think of it like the volume dial.

I donā€™t want to oversell. I want to go bit by bit to the next level (e.g. letā€™s go get another 100 paid customers, but not 1,000) just so I know we can manage it properly.

James: Why lifetime deals?

Daniel: SignHouse has viral loops. When a user sends an email, the recipient finds out about us. So one user brings multiple users ā€”Ā at $0 CAC.

A viral coefficient that has a low user base is close to 0. You need that user base.

And given that itā€™s such an old industry, we need to get up to speed and get that viral loop spinning.

That's my hypothesis anyway. Time will tell whether I'm right!

Get acquired by building a business (not a product)

James: How much did you sell Simple.ink for?

Daniel: Sadly, I can't share too much about the numbers because of my confidentiality clause. But I can say itā€™s an amountĀ that was life changing and 6 figures. It bought me more freedom and changed my mindset.

James: Why did you decide to sell it?

Daniel: We got an offer that we thought was very good. We put on our wisdom hats and realized that, even though we were 25 and 19, it would cover our retirement.

James: How responsible of you.

Daniel: You should take risks when youā€™re youngā€¦ but perhaps if you have a foundation of stability, it's easier to take those risks.

James: Any tips for someone who might want to get their product acquired?

Daniel: Yep.

First, turn a buck. We optimized for profit. You should do the same.

Second, make sure you don't need to sell. Because you can only sell when you donā€™t necessarily have to sell. Thatā€™s leverage. Itā€™ll protect you from making stupid decisions, accepting lowballs, thinking short-term, etc

Third, when selling, list the startup everywhere. We sold the company throughĀ Acquire.comĀ and paid the fairly-earned 4% commission to them. But really, list the company everywhere - Twitter, Acquire, Flippa, FB groups, etc. Itā€™s better to have options.

Finally, build something youā€™d want to acquire. And I'm not talking about the product; I'm talking about the business. Processes, SOPs, people - everything.

Distribution > product

James: Where would you say your genius is?

Daniel: What Iā€™m really focusing on is distribution. SEO, viral loops, setting up a system where affiliates make a ton of money with us, etc. ā€” I've noticed that's what makes me tick.

Am I an expert? Not sure, but Iā€™m on my way to it. I sold a company due to the distribution I built.

And in my mind, distribution is more important than product.

James: Always?

Daniel: No, that doesnā€™t apply to everyone.

Iā€™m not in it to innovate. Iā€™m in it to make money in a healthy way ā€”Ā i.e. provide a lot of value to people and, in a fair way, charge for that.

So for the type of products I would build, distribution is more important than product.

Plus, Iā€™m not that great at product!

James: Fair enough.

Daniel: Also, products can be replicated. Competitors can catch up. But great distribution is difficult to replicate. It can be a moat.

James: How was Simple.ink's acquisition affected by distribution?

:Daniel: Ultimately, it made the company more desirable to the acquirer.

We had distribution in place that was automated and self-sustainable, so that reduced risk. All they would have to do is tend the garden, instead of having to match our skill and output.

James: Fair enough. Any hot distribution tips for indie hackers?

Daniel:

  • Focus on what worked for you and others in the last 12 months. Conditions change.
  • Copy 90-95% of what you see that works, adapt the last 5-10% to you.
  • Invest in SEO. It keeps on paying at low-to-zero marginal cost. Most of my success comes from SEO, so obviously I will beat that drum like crazy.
  • If possible, set some conditions from the start so that if you're winning you're winning big ā€” like the viral loop I mentioned earlier.
  • Diversify your distribution channels
  • Be a farmer (long-term focus), not a hunter (short-term focus).

Farming > hunting

James: Tell more more about farming vs hunting. What does "hunting" mean to you in this context?

Daniel: "Hunting" is looking for quicker, short- or medium-term results. But those are also things that do not scale. They are one-offs.

  • Ads
  • Influencer campaigns
  • PR campaigns
  • Cold sales
  • And, of course, the holy grail: Going viral

James: And "farming"?

Daniel: "Farming" is slow. But it's rewarding, it compounds, and it keeps on giving. Some examples are:

  • SEO
  • YouTube videos
  • Affiliate programs
  • Making genuine connections with other founders, etc.
  • Spending that extra time to make your workplace a great one for your team
  • etc.

Theyā€™re hard to get off the ground, but if you have the time, just do them.

James: If farming is the way to go, why doesn't everybody do it?

Daniel: The problem is the mind. Farming feels too slow or two time intensive. Like the seeds you planted four months ago are and are only amounting to a piece of land where everything looks like mud.

But if you've seen what you can grow in a garden given enough patience, then you know what farming can do.

James: Seeing is believing.

Daniel: Once you do it, you canā€™t go back.

Farming isn't for everyone

James: Should everyone farm?

Daniel: No, you need to decide whether you've got time or not.

Iā€™m 26 now and Iā€™m impatient as hell. But I know objectively I've got a lot of time to compound growth.

I saw a Twitter post the other day about an indie hacker who is 40+. They don't have as much time as I do, and they have kids to feed. So they don't care about farming. They need to hunt now and put enough resources aside.

Then, they can worry about farming.

James: What is the farming:hunting sweet spot?

Daniel: Best case scenario is 80% farming, 20% hunting.

Skip the advice

James: Any parting advice for indie hackers?

Daniel: Two things. First, stop searching for advice!

I used to make this mistake a lot. I thought that by gathering every piece of advice, I would end up with a unified theory that would guarantee my success.

Kinda like Thanos putting together all the stones.

All advice put together leads toā€¦ THIS!

ā€œThe recipe to success.ā€

Nope, no such thing.

James: No?

Daniel: All advice is like the clothing you try on in the changing room. Could look wonderful, but not on you. So what do you do with it? You just put it aside.

Why would you buy an extra small when you fit a medium?

I think that's what people do with advice. It doesn't fit them, but they still buy that piece of clothing.

James: So all advice should be ignored?

Daniel: Not ignored. Listen to all advice. But don't follow any of it. Just hear it. Whatever bubbles up from within later is the advice that fits you (probably!).

James: I like that.

Daniel: And follow the stories ā€” not the advice ā€” of people who were where you are 12-24 months ago.

Stripeā€™s story, Appleā€™s story, etc. ā€” they donā€™t matter. They did all this under different conditions

What you want is just the next few steps on the staircase. Not a huge jump.

Don't take it too seriously

James: And the second piece of advice (that no one should listen to)?

Daniel: Donā€™t take your business too seriously. Too strong of a grip on something can take the passion out of it. I sometimes forget that.

James: True enough! Where can people find you?

Daniel: Iā€™m most active on X.

If youā€™re a SaaS founder and want to invest in SEO, I started a content agency that increases MRR.

If youā€™re into AI, I paid $5,000 for the domain guides.ai so we can create beginnerā€™s guides for AI.


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  1. 1

    Isn't this the guy who copied Ben Issens content and sold it as his? there was like a whole saga around it for plagiarizing content, not sure why he's giving tips now....

    A reference for clarity -
    https://twitter.com/ben_issen/status/1494634050199425030

    1. 1

      How is nobody else pointing this out šŸ¤Æ crazy that this guy is preaching "Copy 90-95% of what you see that works" after being caught outright copying & re-selling other creator's products

      1. 1

        He literally mean copy it 1:1 and claim your rights on it lol...
        This guy is a joke.

  2. 1

    Hey, Community I would like to share product hunt launch of - Echo ( https://www.producthunt.com/posts/echo-78ebfee0-82df-4cac-be61-c6c020f27972 )

    I believe you all understand the value of innovation and efficient communication.

    Echo is a powerful browser extension that lets you leave voice comments directly into platforms like Google Docs,Slides,Sheets Notion, and Figma & more.

    Imagine giving feedback, explaining complex ideas, or collaborating on projects & designs using the simplicity and nuance of your voice.

    As an early adopter, your insights and feedback will be invaluable in shaping this tool to better suit your needs.

    PH - https://www.producthunt.com/posts/echo-78ebfee0-82df-4cac-be61-c6c020f27972

    Best, Amogh Tiwari

  3. 1

    Thanks for the story :). Just wondering how you got backlinks to your stats pages?

  4. 1

    Daniel always come with great and inspiring insights.

  5. 1

    That's awesome. This guy's crazy!

  6. 1

    Can't agree more. Ideas are everywhere. Being able to reach the audience not so much.

    1. 1

      šŸ™Œ

  7. 1

    Damn, some of these analogy's hit hard..."only amounting to a piece of land where everything looks like mud" what a line.

    Curious to know, when approaching a new idea or projects, what was the ratio of building to marketing the business?

    1. 1

      Thanks!! Glad it hit home

      RE: Ratio - my answer is not super helpful for most here...
      ā€¢ We pay for development - we don't know how to code
      ā€¢ The second development starts (or perhaps even before that), we start marketing

  8. 1

    First time founder are obsessed about the products
    Second time founders are obsessed about distribution.

    From a tweet by Justin Kan from Twitch TV

    1. 1

      100% agree!

      Obivously it's not all black-and-white...

  9. 1

    Awesome interview, this guy really knows how to tell a story.

    1. 1

      BTW, I tried a few of his products, simple.ink and guides.ai, which both have really great landing pages and onboarding processes, but they don't seem to be truly usable šŸ˜„. No offense intended, I think he's really got a knack for marketing, but the products could use some focus and refinement. Also, there's a LinkedIn icon on his website that isn't linked, which is a shame because I can't connect with him.

      1. 1

        Guides.ai hasn't got an onboarding process - it's just a blog

        Which LinkedIn icon isn't linked? I don't have any LI icon on my website, rather just text - which is linked https://share.cleanshot.com/yVrHsctK

          1. 1

            That's my brother - but yep, thanks! That's a mistake my part as I did the website. Fixing that now - thanks for pointing it out!

  10. 1

    Great piece of advice. But how do you market a service-based business?

    Like I do offer design subscription service through pentaclay.com

    I tried different methods to reach my clients, though I got 1 client on board, but wondering how to market or position a service-based agency.

    1. 1

      Obviously, I'll say SEO but - I can point you to someone who's got way more experience than me, rather than giving you my opinion: https://youtu.be/gzHdrQ5pDFo?si=Q9ANyj81kwdIz6Bm&t=2640

      (Timestamp is set)

      1. 1

        Thanks for the video, that will be helpful. Keep grinding.

  11. 1

    For indiehacker or any business owner they should do SEO. It is free to do SEO, at least the basic. And website with good SEO usually looks better and is more trustworthy than website with crappy SEO.

    WIth that being said I made a tool that will help you with SEO specifically when doing blogs.

    My tool will go tru thousands of keywords related to you specific niche and target customer and do analysis to those keywords to come out with the best keywords to target for your blogs. All automated.

    It also analyze existing blogs to suggest you type of blog you should write to rank higher.

    If you guys want to try it out check out creativeblogtopic.com

  12. 1

    Viral loops need lifetime deals

    As a huge fan of both viral loops and lifetime deals, I thank you for saying this.

    Lifetime deals are an EXCELLENT way to jumpstart your viral loop.

    There's very little net downside to doing lifetime deals IF every time your lifetime users use your app, you get some kind of promotional benefit.

    They're literally paying you to promote your product. That's just nuts. šŸ¤Æ

    (Lifetime deals for internal software, e.g. CRM, uptime monitoring, accounting, etc., are a different matter altogether)

    But stuff like link-in-bio tools, survey form apps, Calendly clones, etc.?

    Lifetime the shit out of those products!

    1. 1

      YES!! We're big fans of LTDs... for some companies! Here's my thinking of why it makes sense for us: https://usesignhouse.com/ltd

      I feel like the sentiment will grow more and more... e.g. even 37signals SOMEHOW https://once.com/

      1. 1

        Sshhh... Don't over-promote it. šŸ¤£

        Otherwise everyone will jump on the bandwagon!

        But what an excellent read.

        I've used lifetime deals for years, all the benefits you mentioned are spot-on.

        And no, you don't even need a viral loop to benefit from most of those things.

        1. 1

          Let's connect? Would love your advice on LTDs, given we're running one now and you have more experience šŸ™Œ

          1. 1

            I followed you on Twitter!

  13. 1

    What's up with the head

    1. 1

      It looks just like the movie Zardoz šŸ¤£

    2. 1

      Sorry, I donā€™t have a conventional photoshoot picture šŸ˜­ Itā€™s The only pic I had when a profile pic was requested for the interview

      1. 1

        ah ok, I was wondering why I keep seeing heads show up in my feed.

        I didn't know it was an actual requirement for creating the post. I just assumed you guys were super egotistical.

        1. 1

          Ahh no, it's just my shortcoming of not having a proper image... I might actually have to use one of those AI headshot generators y'know....

          1. 1

            I'll let Danny know you're on your way.

            1. 1

              hahahahah

  14. 1

    That's awesome. I'm just starting BulkBlizzard and I felt like I was doing NOTHING by improving SEO/Listing in directories. But I agree, it's all about long term. My question is, how long does it take for SEO to start paying off?

    1. 1

      For us, it took anywhere between 3 and 6 months to see SEO start to pick up... in different projects

      But when it does, god is it sweet...

    2. 1

      Focus on other more "instantly-gratifying" channels like social, direct marketing (DMs/cold email), and lifetime deal launches in the beginning stages.

      If you look at most indie hackers' journeys in the beginning, very few actually got traction from SEO.

  15. 1

    Hey folks! Daniel here šŸ™‹ā€ā™‚ļø

    Thanks so much if you've read everything or at least if you've scrolled so far. It's an honour for me to be featured by Indie Hackers, given it's been my inspiration for so so many years...

    If I can help with any questions, just shoot a comment here and I'll do my best to help.

    Also, let's connect on X/Twitter! (click me)