Indie Hacker Tweet Examples - Copy & Post

Indie hacker twitter is about proving a different model works. The content that performs is specific: revenue numbers, time investments, and honest takes on what bootstrapping is actually like versus what the blogs say. These examples cover the milestones, the lessons, and the reality of building without outside money.

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20 Tweet Examples

built a product over 3 weekends. charged $29/month. 47 customers in 6 months. $1,363 MRR. still working my day job. this is what early looks like.

the indie path isn't faster than VC. it's slower. it's just yours.

profitable at $3k MRR with zero employees, zero debt, and zero investors telling me what to build. take that however you want.

launched my first product: 0 users. second product: 12 users. third: 43 users. fourth: 847 users. the skill is learnable. ship more.

the best thing about being an indie hacker: when a customer emails me, they're emailing the person who built it.

most VC-backed startups I know are optimizing for the next round. I'm optimizing for the next feature my customers actually asked for.

month 1: $0 MRR. month 24: $8,400 MRR. if you told me at month 3 that this was the timeline, I might have quit. don't quit at month 3.

indie hacker math: 200 customers × $49/month = $9,800 MRR = $117k ARR = more than my corporate salary, full ownership, no boss.

the thing nobody tells you about being an indie hacker: the loneliness is real. the freedom is real too. both at the same time.

quit my job 18 months ago to build products. current income: $6,200/month. current work hours: 30/week. current happiness: the highest it's ever been. sample size: one.

most indie hackers fail because they build products they want, not products people need. the solution is boring: talk to ten people before writing a line of code.

the indie hacker who makes $5k/month and works 25 hours a week is not less successful than the founder who raised $2M. different game. different metrics.

my product doesn't have a sales team, a marketing team, or a customer success team. it has me and a well-written help doc. working fine.

didn't raise. didn't hire. didn't pivot. just kept improving the same product for 2 years. $12k MRR. the boring strategy works.

if your side project makes $500/month, it's not a side project. it's a business with a very reasonable marketing budget.

the unfair advantage of the indie hacker: you can make a decision and implement it in 24 hours. a VC-backed startup takes 3 weeks and a Notion doc.

launched on Product Hunt. got 400 upvotes, 12 free signups, 1 paid customer. Product Hunt is a vanity metric. direct outreach is the real channel.

my customer retention is 92% monthly. my competitor's is 78%. they have 20 employees and a Series A. I have a great product and low overhead.

the indie hacker graveyard is full of great products that ran out of runway before finding distribution. build the distribution before the product, not after.

three years ago I made $0 from products I built. last year: $74k. this year: on track for $140k. the skill compounds. keep building.

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