Melanie Massinger
UX / UI designer π©π»βπ»β€οΈπππ³ from π¦πΉ
Founding Member since April 16, 2019.
Participated in theπ Projects
πͺ Skills
Design SaaS Product Management
π Location
Austria
π Joined
July 05, 2018
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Content Lessons from Bootstrappers
(indiecontentstrategy.com) -
A browser plugin that lets you check social media link previews while you browse
(producthunt.com) -
A strategy for thinking clearly, by James Clear
(twitter.com)
Melanie's most recent posts See all
Melanie's most recent comments See all
Thanks for collecting these in a thread, Marie π
So many awesome projects, congrats to all of you. I'm looking forward to the ebooks by @rhipayne and @Anashch - great topics!
Oh yes, it continues to be a great learning experience - I wish you a lot of fun working on it!
We run madewithvuejs.com (@madewithvuejs) and its sister sites for the other frameworks. I don't want to spam this thread with all the links haha, but you can find them in the footer on the site :)
Heya Juliette!
Maybe I can throw in my two cents on this :) Me and my partner run collections of curated resources and projects around the Vue.js / Laravel / React and Svelte ecosystems.
If you want to completely open-source it, I think you'll have to establish some kind of style guide and shared vision within your emerging community so the contributions are in line with what you want to build. This will probably need more involvement from you initially (also especially to encourage people to contribute), so you can be more hands-off about the content later.
Adding to the recommendations of the others: Maybe you want to look into the topic of community management in general - there's a lot of research (aside of the specific focus on OSS communities). Perhaps this blog is interesting for you: https://communityroundtable.com/blog
Congrats on launching your channel, Romy! I loved watching your trailer and just subscribed.
I'm a designer who can code a little, and I'm lucky to have a great dev as my partner. But lately I think I'm relying too much on him to code custom stuff when I could solve those things myself with nocode tools ;)
So I'm looking forward to your upcoming videos!
I love this, Anne-Laure! A lot of great tips in there. The "not yet" technique is one of the best things I started doing for myself, but I didn't know the book by Carol Dweck yet. Thanks for recommending.
Haha yes, itβs definitely something different. We get to know more and more couples that work together, but not everyone works in tech. I feel it makes a difference because they don't identify as much with their work / don't see it as a hobby too. I'm still not sure whether it's good or bad that we do
Most "guidelines" we define are to not get too involved with the other's emotions. Like working on tasks that might frustrate us alone in separate offices and turning off Slack. It's not productive if the other one wants to help but can't. It makes us both miserable talking it through instead of just solving the problem in "isolation". We're also better at stopping ourselves from talking about the same problems again and again now.
There are still things we're working on β like not feeling pressured into working when the other one does, but I'm not sure how to tackle them yet.
Generally, we also have a very structured day and know exactly when the other does what. I know that sounds super boring, but it helps set expectations. F.ex. we know when it's time to stop working, cook dinner and eat. So if one of us is hungry already they don't have to nag the other to stop working. It's little things that totally add up to make us feel comfortable.
How do you two handle your day to day together? Maybe you're not the same kind of control freaks we are π