Getting started with something simple is the best way to get more ideas, to build a tiny audience, to get feedback, to learn. There's just so many things that just roll after that. Having a course, a book. I think it's the easiest way to get started. And so, yeah, that's the entire point is to start with something simple. There's this sense as a business owner that if you charge a subscription, then you will get monthly recurring revenues.
So you get $10 in January, you're going to get $10 in December, and you know, it's going to keep going like this. What I do is I tend to remove any subscription, and I really ask myself, do I need that subscriptions? A friend of mine is telling me, if you have a recurring payment, you should provide a recurring value. You need to build that idea, because that idea is so smart. I'll build that with you. I need a nutpad right here.
That's a successful startup ideas podcast, and you have to pull it out. You're like, okay, let me just take a note on that. All right, I am so excited to have you, Mark, on the show, on the startup ideas podcast. On my mount rush board of indie hackers, I've got Peter levels, I've got Danny Postma, and I definitely have Mark Lewis. I finally got you to come up, agree to come on the pod, you're here, and welcome. Man, thank you so much, big friend of the pod, which the love episodes in them.
I'm happy to be finally in here. You're here, man, you're here, and you came prepared too, which I love. You've got a list of a bunch of ideas. I take your ideas very seriously, because you've been able to build a pretty big audience on YouTube. You've made, in revenue, millions of dollars at this point. Which one of these ideas do you want to start with? Because they're all pretty interesting.
Just before we get started, I've got lots of ideas, lots of them are terrible, but I try all of them, and eventually some of them ended up working. So whatever I prepared, some of them might not be the best, but it crossed my mind, and I think it's worth exploring. Yeah, and it's funny, because sometimes the bad ideas end up being the good ideas. And that is absolutely crazy. This reminds you that even with the years of experience, you'll still not really know what you're doing. Yeah, exactly.
And sometimes you just got to put it out there and make it ugly and just see what happens. And it strikes a chord, and you're like, wow, I actually can't believe how bad of an idea this is, but it's actually interesting to people. Yeah. Yeah. And sometimes the opposite happens when you think you have an amazing idea. You spend two months building it, and then nothing happens. I guess that's the open zones. I think.
I think one good part to get started is there is this gold rush for SaaS products. But I think because we hear amazing stories of a kid who use no code and make a million dollar using a SaaS product, but I think there are tons of products before that that are much simpler to start with. And I think one of them is teaching what you actually know.
You probably have a background, whether you've been studying something, you've been, I don't know, it could be a support background, it could be employee backgrounds, having a course, a book. I think it's the easiest way to get started. So yeah, you're right. Everyone knows something, but how do you know, just because you know something, doesn't mean the thing that you know is what someone wants to buy necessarily.
So for example, it might be way easier to sell someone how to build a SaaS than it is to sell online than it is to sell someone how to make ceramics or pottery or cups. Maybe there's a big market for that, but I just know that the customer value for how to build SaaS maybe is bigger than maybe the ceramics. So the question to you is how do you think about the customer here and how much they're willing to pay or does it matter? I think that's my case.
I like the creation process and I wouldn't think too much about the customer. I would still create it and I would think about something that changed my life and building a SaaS is one of them. But sometimes there are little things that are, I'm talking about very simple things, but like how to sleep better. Like for instance, I see the impact on my sleep on my day. If I have a good night, eight hours of sleep, I wake up and punt. My entire day is like a blessing.
But now if you're talking about getting the perfect night of sleep on repeat, it's much harder than just being lucky once. You need to go to bed at the same time of the time. You need a specific temperature, you need earplugs, you need all these kind of things and it becomes complicated. And this is something that you could sell to anyone. Everybody needs a good night of sleep. And I remember in 2021, that's one of the things that changed my life.
That could literally something you could build in like you could make a PDF in a day. And you can sell that to start. Don't tell anyone, but I've got 30 plus startup ideas that could make you millions. And I'm giving them away for free. These aren't just random guesses. They're validated concepts from entrepreneurs who've built $100 million plus businesses. I've compiled them into a one simple database. Compiled from hundreds of conversations I've had on my podcast.
But the main thing is most of these ideas don't need a single investor. Some cost nothing to start. I'm pretty much handing you a cheat sheet. The idea bank is your startup shortcut. Just click below to get access. Your next cash flowing business is waiting for you. So that's really interesting. So when you were saying, you know, everyone knows something, basically package it up and you should you can sell it.
I was thinking more of like a hobby or something like that. But what you're saying is actually, no, you might just know something about life. Meaning you might know just some life hack, basically. Like how to sleep better. And if you write out like as a prom, what are the, you know, what are the 10 life hacks that you've learned in your life? Maybe it's how to get to the gym consistently. And then what you're saying is,
okay, write down all the life hacks. Write a PDF. You can even use tools like gamma.app, which is kind of a really, it's like a tool to really make lead magnets quite easily that I've been using. Have you seen it? No, I haven't. That was googling it. Yeah. Yeah, I've been obsessed with it recently. If you go to their website, it doesn't, it doesn't say like we make lead magnets. But I use it for a lead magnet. And I use it for, for just making beautiful websites out of
content. Yeah. Yeah. Because design, that design matters a lot here. And what, even if you just ideas is very simple, having a good landing page, like the one you talk about, like this is one of, one of your favorite, I think it was a newsletter or tweet of yours that says the tweets size or tweet bites landing page. I think man, that's such a great way to get started without overthinking.
You can have a call to action by a little course here or there. And if you do the work to launching a little bit everywhere, you know, then you learn a lot about what's happening and what's not happening. You learn about creating headlines. You learn about putting your ideas out there and stop overthinking. I think that's the first step when you're starting in this journey, even if it seems simple, that's the point that's the point of like you're just getting started.
Then you can, yeah. Yeah, I think the counter argument that someone makes when they hear something like this is they go, okay, great. How does sleep better? Like I'm going to go make, maybe I can make $50,000 a year with this. But I think what you're saying is, and correct me if I'm wrong, but I think what you're saying is that could just be the starting place, meaning once you put out this PDF around how to sleep, you might have an idea for a sleep supplement or I don't know, like an iMask
business, right? There we go. Yeah, that's the point. That's the starting, that's the ignition of the business. I think there's like sometimes you get this idea and you think that's going to change everything and this, you know, this is like your full throttle all into it.
But I think it's a journey and an idea is just a part of the journey and there will be so many ideas in that longer journey and getting started with something simple is the best way to get more ideas, to build a tiny audience, to get feedback, to learn, just so many things that just roll after that. And so, yeah, that's the entire point is to start with something simple. If you were, let's just say you were creating a digital product around how to sleep better.
What are your next steps? Okay, you have the idea and then how do you name it? How do you how do you generate traffic to it? How do you think about growing a digital product like that? Okay, so for talking about something very simple like creating an ebook to sleep better, I would definitely use a medium to share what I'm working on. So if it's, if I'm comfortable on the camera, I'll definitely go on YouTube or TikTok Instagram. If I am better with writing because
I'm a little bit introvert, then I will go on Twitter. And I would learn how to share my ideas, learn how to share what I'm currently working on so I can create content out of my daily life. And that would create, it wouldn't make a buzz at the beginning, but I would create an initial traction. You would get five to like, I don't know, 10 people who just look at what you're doing. And they'll be here when you're launching. That would be the first step.
Yeah, and I want to say one quick thing on this. So, dude, I, I applaud you for doing this, but I was, I was for a while, I was recording the direct camera videos, where I'd be like, here's the 10 ways to do XYZ. And I, you know, do these videos. And I hated it. I hated it, man. Like I, I really, really felt really unnatural to me. And um, whereas like on Twitter and writing and even doing these long form podcasts, it feels very
natural to me. But like writing a script and staring into the camera made me feel very, like, weird. And sometimes feeling weird is like, I'm, it's not really feeling weird actually. Uncomfortable, sometimes feeling uncomfortable is the necessary evil you need to go through in order to like do something great. But at a certain point, I was just unhappy. And I hated doing it. So I think the question for people, if they're, if they're going to like document their path,
you have to ask yourself, which format is good for you? Yeah. Man, I can relate so much to that. And I, if you go back to my Twitter accounts in the very beginning of the journey, at 2021, 2022, you would see tweets of me when now with cringe because I'm, I'm trying to tell
people what to do. I think the mistake we do. And I think it's kind of natural because you open YouTube and you see videos with million views of, I don't know, Alex Hormuzi, who is telling you five mistakes you're making as, you know, an entrepreneur, it's like, there is this teacher mindset. And you're like, I'm going to copy that. I'm going to imitate. I'm going to teach them what I know. But at the beginning, you don't know anything. So you want to start by using I and not you. So I did
that. I learned that. And then maybe later in the journey, when you start to have a big year following, you've learned a lot, then maybe you can start teaching and telling you, you should be doing this or stuff like that. But I think it's a good finding the right medium. So Twitter, social, like YouTube, Instagram, whatever this is, and finding the formats on how you tell your ideas. I think this is, this is very important to you. Took me. Yeah. Yeah. And I think about format
a lot too. So what you mean by format is like, I did that today and not you should do that. Right. And and how do you like? So a lot of people are going to agree with you. Yeah, a format. But how do you how do you develop your own format? You know, there's a lot of there's a lot of content around developing your own voice. But developing your own voice is very different than developing a format that is going to work and and get shared by people. How do you think about that?
Man, those are good questions because I can really retrace the beginning of the journey. I'm like, Hey, I was actually thinking about that. I think it comes to finding consuming content and picking the little things you like from each creator. For instance, I like the mindset of Peter Levelle's to say, I did that and having like lots of little project and I copied that and I put it in my head and I think now it's part of me.
Maybe some of your audience know just in well. She's a really good writer on Twitter. I like the way he writes. Like it's very clear, concise, super simple to understand. I was like, okay, I love that. I took the way right and I put it in my head. I'm like, now that's part of my identity. And I mix those cons creators in my head and it becomes my identity. So my identity is not really my identity actually. It's like a mix of lots of things I phone everywhere plus what I've discovered
along the way. But at the beginning, there's literally nothing. And if you go back to my Twitter, you really see that things have changed a lot from the very beginning. Yeah. So it's interesting. We were talking about Mount Rushmore before. It's almost like you should create that your own creator Mount Rushmore for your formats, meaning pick three or four people who you really look up to and then write down what is the one or two things that you take away from
their content that you want to implement into yours. And then from that, go and experiment with different formats. Exactly that. Cool. All right. And then, okay, so then you start creating content. How do you sell the PDF? How do you think about pricing it or e-book? Oh, man. Pricing could be an entire YouTube video of one hour for that. I think you want to start with a paywall. You don't want you want to avoid launching free things. Unless you're passionate about
unless you have a really good idea and you think it could work. Otherwise, you want to have a paywall because that teaches you a lot of things. You don't want to price too cheap because obviously, when it's cheap, people will undervalue the product. And as you're getting started, if you sell 10 PDF and each PDF is like $1,000, then at the end of the month, you're not even paying the bills. So you want to have the motivation in for that. You need to price a little higher than that
expected. You look at competitors' prices for that. If you don't know how to price, it's just really a bunch of a bunch of a... But yeah, I would go for one-time payment for sure at the very beginning, especially if you're sending a course. I would say one thing you can do is get all the data around a competition, like seeing where you sit in competition, I think is really helpful. So make a list of all the data points around what people are selling it for.
Take that data, go into a clawed, let's say, and do a prompt. Be like, hey, I need you to help me price this. You're my pricing partner. Pretend your the best pricing expert on the planet. I always say pretend you work at Walmart or you're the head of pricing at Walmart and the best in the world that you get paid a million dollars a year to do this. Here's the data. I want to price
this product. What do you think I should be priced at and why? If you're a solo indie hacker type person, just having going back and forth with AI will help refine what your first price should be. Yeah, it's crazy, good. Yeah. So and then the other thing to note about pricing and by the way, comment on YouTube if you want us to do or you don't want to do a or you're interested in a pricing episode. I don't know if people are down for that, but I think you can always change your price,
too. Right? Yes. I've been playing a lot with that. I started with very cheap and cheap subscriptions with a long time free long free trial. And then I ended up removing the free trial, pricing higher and revenue is sometimes even moving, removing the subscription. I think it really depends on the product. I think there is a rush towards subscriptions because there's this sense as a business owner that if you charge a subscription, then you will get
monthly recurring revenues. You get 10 months on January. You're going to get $10 in January. You're going to get $10 in December and it's going to keep going like this. But I think as a customer, it's kind of a pain to have subscriptions because we have Netflix, Spotify, etc. And so in the customer's mind, when you see a subscription, you're already thinking what happens if I have to cancel and I forget. And when you create objections in the mind of the customer at
the moment, the purchase, that is usually impacting a conversion rate. And what I do is I tend to remove any subscription and I really ask myself, do I need that subscriptions? A friend of mine is telling me, if you have a recurring payment, you should provide a recurring value, which usually falls in the category of software for businesses. Like if you're using, I don't know, like a scheduling tool because you have calls every week, and it makes sense to have a recurring subscription.
If you look at this, there's a lot of product that can actually remove the entire subscription model and have one-time payments or a system like a credit system that works really well too. That doesn't push the customer to make a big commitment and it's easier to sell. Who do you think does pricing well? What are examples of people who do pricing well? Before we move on to the next startup idea, I just have to ask selfishly. Examples from indie hikers or any
company. It could be anything. Any company. I'm interested in it because I'm just interested in companies that do pricing well because I think there's this shift happening right now to your point, which is like people are getting sick of monthly subscriptions. And so I'm just interested on who's innovating or who's doing interesting things in pricing. Quick ad break, let me tell you about a business I invested in. It's called boringmarketing.com. So a few years ago, I met this group of
people that were some of the best SEO experts in the world. They were behind getting some of the biggest companies found on Google. The secret sauce is they've got a set of technology and AI that could help you outrank your competition. So for my own businesses, I wanted that. I didn't want to have to rely on Mark Zuckerberg. I didn't want to depend on ads to drive customers to my businesses. I wanted to rank high on Google. That's why I like SEO and that's why I use boring
marketing.com and that's why I invested in it. They're so confident in their approach that they offer a 30-day sprint with 100% money back guarantee. Who does that nowadays? So check it out, highly recommend boringmarketing.com. Nobody really likes paying. So there's nothing that comes in mine. I think I remember seeing the meta subscription, the meta usage, where I was like, oh, that's cool. But I don't have any company in mind. One company that comes in mind when it comes to pricing,
it's a smart move on their side. But as a customer, I don't like it. It's a stripe with a fees. If you actually look at your monthly fee, that's a lot of it. I think that's where I spent the most money in my business, like probably $5,000 a month. They got 3% for the cards plus an extra 1% if the card is not from Europe. Plus an extra 1% if you're charging another currency and plus 0.4% if you want to make an invoice. In the end, you pay like 5% to 6%. So it's smart for the
business. And as a customer, I'm not big kind of it. Yeah, I think that's like the paper usage model, which is the more you use it, the more, like in theory, you're happy because, oh, you're making all this money there and you're happy to give them a cut. And if you're not making a lot of money, then you don't give them a cut. But the reality is it would be great if it was a sliding scale, meaning instead, maybe it's 2.9%. Let's say 3%, I don't know what stripe fees are, but let's just
say for the sick this conversation, that's 3% up until 100,000 of sales. And then for 100,000 to a million, it's 2%, and then a million and more, it's 1%. Man, yeah, that's really, you just remind me of pricing. I saw that was really smart, but he was a year ago. They were charging higher, it's a subscription, they were charging higher on the first month. Or they were charging you on the first month for a baseline that they show on their site. And then it decreases after like
2 to 3 months. And so as a customer, you don't want to cancel because otherwise you lose what you already gained by being a customer for the past 3 months. I can't remember the company, but I thought it was a really smart pricing. That is really smart. That is really smart. Like no one's doing that. Yeah, that makes me want to ship something and just try just to see. That's amazing. Okay, moving on to your next idea, idea number 2, what do you got?
Right, if we step. All right, maybe we can move from that whatever course you're trying to sell. There's something I love, and it's maybe speaking to only gamers out there, but I'm a big fan of all the fucker. I've played games for so many years. And I try to gamify things that have a purpose in real life. So for instance, you can gamify your sleep, you can score points, you can compete with friends, you can lose money if you don't get good sleep or if you don't track your habits or
something like that. I think there's a lot to do in the gamification system because everybody wants better sleep, everybody wants to eat better, everybody wants to work out. And I think there is a game, gamification, things that could help people achieve their goals. And that could be a software by itself. So you would have to, so I buy the thesis, which is gamification, help people do things and create streaks and results. But what do you, like what do verticals most interesting?
You know, would you, I think sleep is really interesting. But by the way, sleep, like, I'll show you right now, like I use eight sleep, the mattress, and it's like a smart mattress. And the first thing I do when I wake up in the morning is I check my sleep fitness score. There you go. And so I slept well last night, 99%. And then you can see like your REM sleep and your deep sleep. So you can see that I like, you know, it's gamified. Like this is gamified.
Yeah, yeah. You're not wearing any ring or anything. Is there the mattress to do that? Just the mattress tells me that. I don't know how it does it. I don't ask questions. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I think in this case, it's, I think it's a mattress company that sells the app on top of that. So that's eventually on the call on the podcast, you would end up talking about the mattress because it's interesting. Normally, you don't talk about a mattress.
I think that makes a lot of sense, but I would require you to already have a business. If you're sitting, of course, about how to sleep better, you know, you could bring a litterboard of all the people who purchased and make them compete. First sleep, there is Pokemon Sleep, an app that was released, I think a year ago, or something, which makes 100 million a year. And basically, the better you sleep, the more you poke, pokemons will grow and evolve.
And there's a Pokemon Sleep is making a hundred million dollars a year. Did I hear that correctly? Yeah. I don't know what is the license fee they pay for the Pokemon license. But he's pretty insane. Okay, wow. I'm just reading this now. This is, this is absolutely bonkers. They have, they made a hundred million dollars on 9.8 million downloads. So that's pretty crazy. Like, that's $10 for download. Yeah, it's crazy.
Yeah, that's pretty crazy. I think the nostalgia of Pokemon combined with a real life goal, that's the big, something big. Okay, so here's the unlock. Here's the idea. The idea is this. The day, the idea is there's a, we all know the things that people want to do. Sleep better, sleep better, eat better, all the things. You can, you can ask Claude, you can ask whoever, you can ask your mom. These things don't change human beings don't change.
We all know that gamification, leaderboard status, badges, streaks is a product design tool that helps people achieve their goal. It sounds like what is the unlock that Pokemon Sleep has done? Well, they've licensed the intellectual property of Pokemon and they've added that to this whole concept of gamification, etc. So the question is, the way I'm thinking about this, and I'm like really excited about this as you can see, is what is an opportunity to license a brand
and just basically, what is the idea is this, it's Pokemon Sleep for Acts. You license the IP, and by the way, people, someone's going to be listening to this and say, well, yeah, easy for them who they probably paid so much money for Pokemon and you'd be surprised is how cheap some of these licenses are to get, maybe not Pokemon, but to get amazing licenses
for nostalgic intellectual property, you'd be surprised how cheap they are. I don't want to say who it is because it's someone everyone knows, but there's someone who I know who got the license, like when to basically, what do they call it, like a French, not a franchise, it's like an intellectual property conference, licensing conference in Las Vegas and he got like a Star Wars for like some apparel. He basically bought the Star Wars license for some apparel line and he
thought it was going to cost, he's like, Star Wars is huge, right? And he's like, oh my God, it's going to cost like millions of dollars a year and it ended up costing $50,000 for the first two years and some percentage of sale, I think it was like two or three percentage, but now all of a sudden you can do Facebook ads with Star Wars on it. So huge. Yeah, that's crazy. I mean, yeah, man, I would love to grow my Jedi as soon as I ship it started, my lightsabers becomes I don't
know, double or something, just so many. And we're talking about general stuff like sleep or workouts, but you get good deep into niche, like developers who commit, this is some, this is an app I have in mind for a long time, I've probably built it in years from now. It's like every time you make a commit as a developer, it's pushed to GitHub. And there is like this super addictive GitHub
things where you have like a grid of all your commits across the last 365 days. Every developer is wherever your software engineer is using TypeScript or your Peter levels using PHP and don't care about anything. Everybody knows about that and everybody loves his grid. And man, I kind of, I want to bring that in and make a massive leaderboard of commits or whatever grids, something that makes people wants to push some code online. This is one of the millions of
niche where you can gamify gamify habits goals. Yeah. Dude, you need to build that idea because that idea is so smart. Think about like during the Web 3 craze, there was an app called sweatcoin. I don't know if you saw this, but it was basically like based on the amount of steps that you took, they would give you this coin. So gamified walking. Think about credit card points, like the more user credit card, the more I think credit card points, meets GitHub,
commits, idea is a massive idea. If you could be the place that people, like the more I commit, the more points I get. And yes, there's a leaderboard, but it also allows me to redeem for something. I think that's the idea that you should do. There you go. And that is my way. There's a financial lead Sanjay. Okay. I'll build that with you. I need a, I mean, I need a not peder right here. That's what the, that's, that's a successful startup ideas
podcast. And you have to pull it, you know, pan, you're like, okay, let me just take a note on that. And the track record you have, because if that end up working two years from now, there's like, this idea was born on the startup ideas, but guest. Exactly. We documented it. Man, I'm really taking note of that one. I'll, I'll CC you all DM you if I ended up ended up building it. Cool. One lot. We have time for one last idea. Can I, can I pick one?
Okay. Because there's one, there's one I'm curious about that I've thought about for many years. I almost don't want to bring it up, but it will bring it up because I said it already. Legal for entrepreneurs. What do you mean by that? Oh, okay. I thought he was your idea. No. I want, I want, I've been, I've been exploring this in the space for, for a few years now, but I haven't built anything in the space. So I'm curious what you mean by legal for entrepreneurs.
Oh, man, I dropped it here because this is the number one question I receive on every YouTube videos I make. Where did you see the company? How does a work? How did you set up your strap account with that company? The same question every single time. And the thing is I, I think there is an opportunity for an info product for sure. So people understand a little bit better about what what is going on. How does the thing work because it's mostly it starts with that.
And eventually for a service where you have you marketplace where you, you match people and their needs and the legal entity that they need. I am, I am, I am terrible at legal stuff. Like this is something that it pulls my hair. So I spend as least time as I can on it, but I think there's a real need because people ask all the time. I think so too. I use Stripe Atlas to like set up my companies to, you know, it's just integrated. We Stripe obviously makes it pretty easy.
But I wish there was someone I could talk to at Stripe Atlas too, you know. Sometimes I'm like, I don't know if I should start an LLC versus S Corp. And you know what I mean? It feels, it feels like there's an opportunity to make it a little more educational and have like a more premium version. I guess like the idea I have here is more of a premium version of Stripe Atlas. Okay. I think yeah, in your case, it's probably like an advanced version maybe for to optimize your
taxes or something like this. Yeah, I mean, it's okay. So the example I'll use is, I, you know, we set up an LLC for one of our businesses in the States. And it started making a bunch of money and we didn't realize that we should have converted it to an S Corp. And which is another type of corporation. So, and that cost us hundreds of thousands if not millions of dollars of taxes. And we would have set it up probably as a, as an S Corp from the
beginning. But we didn't know because we were just on Stripe Atlas. So I wonder, so if you think about it like legal, there's as a spectrum, right? On one end of the spectrum, you have calling you like calling my man, Hatton lawyer, paying my man, Hatton lawyer $1,100 an hour to set up a company, which is something we've done before, you know, which sucks. Like take, it's painful, literally so painful. That, you know, just, it hurts myself that that's what I in this spectrum.
And the other end, the spectrum you have self-serve Stripe Atlas type products that for like a couple hundred bucks get you all set up. It feels like there's something in the middle. All right. I think, yeah, maybe because in your, I think you're from Canada, right? I'm originally from Canada, yes. I think there's a, what I see is from people who are usually not from the US because for you guys, there is this like this easy option of Stripe Atlas.
In your American, I mean, you're from Canada, so I'm a green card holder. So I live in the US now, mostly, but I'm still, it's basically, I'm like an American, yeah. So you paid taxes in the US now? Yeah, I paid taxes in the US. I don't pay taxes to Canada. Okay. Okay, so yeah, you've, you've been, because I look at my situation, I am a French person who is married to a Korean woman in living, living, living, like, text my tax, I pay my taxes in Bali. There was an infinite
ocean of options. Where would I pay my taxes? Where would I pay my company? Where would I open a company? Because I don't need to open a company necessarily in Indonesia or in France. I can open it in Singapore. And so you have like so many options. And sometimes like, yeah, but you have Stripe Atlas in the US where you pay 0% taxes, why not opening there? And then I realize if you do that, then you're not, you have a, you own a company like there and you're living in Indonesia,
it's maybe legal. This is this like entire system where it's like completely fucked up. And I think that's why people are asking is more like not trying to optimize sexist, but to understand the system, where should they set up their company in first place? So that it's working because you could, now that you work with a computer, you could work from anywhere in the world. You can leave anywhere in the world. So there's this like, it's an ocean of options, which creates as well an oceans of
lots. And that's interesting. That's interesting. Yeah. I didn't even consider opening a company outside, outside Canada or the US. To me, it was like, that's where I would open a company because that's all I know. But you're right. There are probably other places that I should have considered for a bunch of reasons. Yeah. And I think for you, it also makes sense where you are because you you might have employees, et cetera. So it's the more things engage for me, the company is one
person needs me. And there's no employee, there's no one else. There's eventually a contractor to edit my videos, but that's it. And so that gets me an enormous amount of flexibility to where I go. But on the downside, where do I go? And that that was the tricky part where I was not really sure where to open first. And interesting. Yeah. And people really ask a lot. Like it's number one condition. So I guess Stripe Atlas for indie hackers with maybe a little more support is
probably an interesting idea. Yeah. When I looked at Stripe Atlas at the beginning, I was living in friends. And I hired someone, a lawyer, and he told me if you own a Stripe Atlas business in friends, like you're going to get flagged. They won't like it because it's like 0% tax even heaven. And so either you would get double tax as if it was a French company. So in that case,
that makes zero sense. Or if one day you get an audit, then you're fucked. And I was like, in that's the moment where I said to realize, wait, so what's you know, and then this entire process of like, okay, I can have a company abroad, but then I need to move abroad as well. And then and then yeah. And then that's when the troubles somehow somehow started. Then you have the regulation that changes in every country. Because at some point, everybody was talking about Dubai.
That's the place to go. And then they changed the regulation and became more expensive. And it was lost. I was like, okay, fuck. I'm not going to optimize anything. I'm going to do something simple. I'm going to go there and boom. I like it. There's there's something here. Someone in the comment section is going to be like, I'm going to do something. So I'm happy you flagged it. And and I appreciate it. Mark Merci. I appreciate you coming on and spending time with us. Where could people
get to know you and your products a little bit more? Mark clu.com. CLOU.com. This is where all my websites are. My revenue is public. And there is my Twitter and YouTube link as well. Beautiful. Check it out. I'm a big fan and hopefully hopefully you come on the pot again sometime. Cheers, man. It was nice. Nice having me. All right. Take care.