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Not Boring Business

41 Episodes

31 minutes | May 24, 2021
Denis Lin
18 minutes | May 18, 2021
Jack Groshek & Colum O'Brien (ModernAction.io)
https://modernaction.io/
16 minutes | May 14, 2021
Luc Meijer (Content Creator at Minimum Studio)
https://minimum.studio/ 
26 minutes | May 13, 2021
Philip Lakin (Founder at No-Code Ops)
https://www.nocodeops.com/
32 minutes | May 12, 2021
Nigel Godfrey (NoCode Boss)
17 minutes | May 11, 2021
John Apolinar (Actor and Co-Founder of UPSAINT Apparel, Leaderboard Jobs, Sales & Partnerships at Inside)
https://inside.com/https://www.leaderboardjobs.com/https://www.upsaint.com/
18 minutes | May 10, 2021
Stephen Campbell (Founder of VirtualGhostWriter and NoCode Makers)
https://virtualghostwriter.com/https://nocodemakers.com/https://stepocampbell.com/
21 minutes | May 7, 2021
Ben Sears (Founder of Billflow.io and Growth Ranker)
Ben Sears joins Jeremy Redman in this episode of the No Code CEO Podcast, and they talk about his contributions to the no-code environment.
15 minutes | May 5, 2021
Darian Parrish (Co-Founder at RAD Seattle)
radseattle.com
38 minutes | Mar 15, 2021
Nikhil Vimal (Consulting Partner/Head of Ops at ChatMode)
Nikhil Vimal is a Consulting Partner at ChatMode. Chat Mode is an AI consultancy and R&D Group that helps organizations design, develop, and deploy Intelligent Automation Solutions for line-of-business use cases.Nikhil Vimal is also the Co-owner at Team Meteor.
14 minutes | Mar 8, 2021
Seth Fannin (Founder of DocDrop)
Seth Fannin is the founder of DocDrop.io. Seth has extensive experience executing critical multimillion-dollar enterprise-level Department of Defense procurement initiatives on large programs and projects in a virtual and dynamic operating environment.Seth has managed over 50 project-based procurement customer accounts valuing $20 million from 2018-2021. He implemented a Purchasing workflow that decreased PO delivery time to the customer by 50%. He can work independently and cross-functionally with team members and customers in a fast-paced environment to make data-informed decisions that result in successful outcomes. Proficient ability to communicate and articulate ideas and thoughts to others outside of the scope. Three years of working in a Remote / Virtual environment across multiple time zones.You can follow Seth Fannin on Twitter at https://twitter.com/fannin_seth.
18 minutes | Mar 1, 2021
Isaac Feldman (Founder @ blicode.co)
Isaac Feldman is a Multi-Functional Designer, and he is also the Founder of Blicode. The core value of Blicode is to take non-technical folks and allow them to explore technology without prior knowledge and by that truly democratizing the startup nation.You can find and follow Isaac Feldman in the following links below.Website - https://blicode.co/Twitter - https://twitter.com/blicodeco
12 minutes | Feb 22, 2021
Felix Wong
Felix Wong is an entrepreneur, community builder, and growth hacker based in Hong Kong and Southeast Asia. His work is based on his passion for helping others develop their ideas and achieve their dreams.Felix is currently the Growth Lead, APAC for AngelHub and WHub, a sister and brother company that fosters the startup ecosystem, succeeds, and offers equity crowdfunding investment for aspiring startups. These positions challenge Felix to use his skills in digital marketing, growth hacks, and startup community engagement.You can learn more and connect with Felix Wong on the following links below.LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/felix12777/Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/felix12777/Twitter - https://twitter.com/felix12777
28 minutes | Feb 15, 2021
Whit Anderson (Founder of Bad Unicorn)
Whit Anderson is the Founder of BadUnicorn. They bring some of the dumbest startup ideas to life. Every other week, we launch a funny or bad or stupid product in our newsletter.Whit is also a Market Research and Sourcing Associate at Techstars. He works closely with the 2019 Atlanta batch to analyze and refine financial models, develop and refine go-to-market strategies, conduct market research, and much more.
23 minutes | Feb 2, 2021
Mat Sherman (Founder of Growthmeter)
Mat Sherman is the Founder of Growthmeter. Growthmeter is the evolution of Mat’s podcast, Forward-Thinking Founders. He is bringing the startup magic of the bay area online so that anyone can experience the power of serendipity with other like-minded founders and investors.You can find and learn more about Mat Sherman on the following links below.Twitter - https://twitter.com/Mat_ShermanNewsletter - https://www.matsherman.com/LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/matsherman/You can also listen and subscribe to his podcast called Growthmeter.
12 minutes | Feb 2, 2021
Avo Manjerian (CEO and Co-founder of Schedex)
I chat with the CEO and Co-founder of Schedex Avo Majerian.
26 minutes | Jan 22, 2021
Taylor Freund from BrandWeld
I chat with Taylor Freund from a no code agency called BrandWeld. Here's everything she's working on: http://brandweld.co http://taylerfreund.com http://CodelessMarket.com
44 minutes | Jul 15, 2020
Ep. 47: Ryan Myher from No Code No Problem talks about his entrepreneurial path to no-code
TLDR;Some Good Quotes So Ben [Tossell from Makerpad], I was following, both of them and I was like looking: I was sitting there one night and I looked up no-code in Apple Podcasts and Spotify. I couldn't find anything. So I messaged Joe on Twitter and I was like, “Hey, I have this idea. I want to start the no-code podcast, and I'm going to call no problem, and I'm gonna do it.” And he's like, yeah, do it. And then like I recorded that night and the next morning I published it and here we are today. The only reason that I knew about Glide Apps in the first place was I saw an ad somewhere and I bookmarked it and was like, I may need this later on. Like, I'll check it out later. And then whenever I got that text [about parties for the weekend], it was like that moment. It was like, in my head, I was like, Oh, this is definitely like, I can build this [app, fucked up] on glide apps. So I went on and I built it like extremely fast within an hour. And I started putting it on like my Snapchat and stuff. I was marketing this book [Podcast Growth Hacking: 0 Plays to $5k in 5 Months] out to like podcast hosts and there are these Facebook groups on obviously Facebook that have like 30 K plus people in it. And I didn't realize how untechnical the majority of podcast hosts are like; compared to them, we are like really technical people. But then compared to people like Emmanuel and Jeremy and all these people from like Dollo and all these companies, like, we're obviously not technical. It's just funny to see the playing field in which what we consider technical and not technical. I would be interested to see how many active users are there a day that actually builds a Bubble. I think that would be more interesting… People were spending like 30 minutes to an hour, a day on Bubble or more like, I feel like that would be way more interesting and give you a lot more insight in the kind of like who you're trying to attract than it would be. Summary Ryan Myher, founder and host from No Code No Problem, joins Jeremy in a maybe off the record conversation about podcasts, top no-code tools, the struggle to freemiums, and thin lines in the field.
56 minutes | Jul 14, 2020
Ep. 44: Jeremy Blalock from Adalo talks about growing and retargeting your start-up from your community feedback
TLDR;Some Good Quotes I think that being in a competitive space, it made sense to us to just give away the product for free to use it at a basic level. But you can't actually. Publish a native mobile app and you can't publish it on a custom domain for web unless you pay. So one thing is it does feel very natural for designers to use our product because it is based on sketch, essentially. But at the end of the day, it's people who are a little bit more on the PowerPoint and Excel world who seem to be excelling at it versus people who are just purely visual designers. If you're building a real startup, you're going to be paying thousands of dollars a month for something, regardless of what you're doing. But when you're just starting out, I think that it's important to have something cheap enough that people see as cheap, and see as attractive, and see as like within their range of affordability. But without kind of realizing that it's going to eventually be a lot more. We feel like our product itself matters and the quality of the way that you build the apps, the interface, all that stuff. But I think that really, you have to build some kind of flywheel that will actually generate more value as more people are there. And I think that the things that we'll do over time are just building that ecosystem and that community. And so having really trying to get more and more people involved in building knowledge around the tool, that will really build value longterm. I was doing a lot of customized stuff just to get these very small number of customer accounts to be successful and to be published. And I feel like at that point it was a big internal struggle of, you know, how do I actually get my time back so I can build the real horror platform and actually get this thing to be successful? I kind of also wished that I just did some sort of launch earlier. I know that the product wasn't polished, I know that it wasn't perfect or nearly as good as it is now, but I feel like getting that early feedback would have been good because now a lot of what people are doing, doesn't really require things that we didn't have then. It's just that we didn't get the necessary, like kind of lift-off until later on. And I think that the whole no-code movement has helped out a ton. So I can't really, it's hard to say what would have happened at that point. The majority of our users really just come from word of mouth and referrals from other people are using the platform and kind of organic sources like that. So, we've really kind of tried to put as much effort as we can into building our communities, both on slide, head on the forum and, you know, really building a big Twitter following. Summary Jeremy Blalock, co-founder and CEO from Adalo, joins Jeremy in a conversation about the turnarounds and creatives process to launch the company and the importance of having a strength no-code community to strengthen the bonds with customers and succeed in the field.
22 minutes | Jul 13, 2020
Ep. 43: Noel Lorenz talks about Bubble as one of the biggest tools for no-code community
TLDR;Some Good Quotes I discovered Bubble. I sat down and I like more or less finished a whole platform in two weeks. And this, after these two weeks after we launched them, like a bit later, But that was just at the point for me, where I saw the potential of no-code or these no-code tools. And, it marked a starting point of my journey into this area. I think the revenue is gonna increase [for a no-code agency], to an extent where there is no difference to a, let's say normal agency. And I mean, normal agencies can get quite a nice revenue. So, I think there isn't quite a big difference. To be honest, we haven't really reached any limits with Bubble. We had some performance issues sometimes and a few things that I wouldn't build a game or something and Bubble, but otherwise it's almost the possibilities are almost endless. So for me, complexity is good because it gives me the freedom to go into any direction I want. Our clients don't want to have like the craziest machine learning application, something like really complex. I mean, the thing is, and that's why no code is so amazing, people always want something really similar. We have a nice community and, just want to empower more people to build without codes, and join our community, join No Code HQ hopefully learn and start your own business. Becoming a billion-dollar company is hard either way if you're doing with code or without code. I mean, that's of course quite challenging. and I think we're on the right track. I mean, we have to continue to, tell more people about no-code we have to work together and not against each other. Summary NoCode is the future. The NoCode movement allows everyone to get on the same level without having a degree in computer science or know every coding language. It gives the opportunity for people who are passionate about their work to get it up online and to create a viable platform for their business. NoCode does not mean easy though. You will fail and you will need to spend hours learning about these building platforms, and that is where your pure passion, drive, and desire to succeed comes in. Noel Lorenz, founder of NoCodeHQ, meets with Jeremy to talk about the broad opportunities and tools he has found to create using Bubble and how the no-code projects are gaining popularity with clients due to its user-friendliness development and low cost.
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