Hi, haven't been online for a few months so sorry if this has been discussed somewhere.

Just to give context: I live in a third-world country and often have ideas (a lot of times borrowed from first-world solutions) to improve things. For example, we have a ton of concerts/events over here but there is no easy digital ticketing system to just fix the mess of manual stamps and having to get your tickets physically beforehand. Since I've worked at both event management and ecommerce software, I kinda know how to build this.

But the problem with this and any idea I ever get always comes down to -> I don't want to charge for it. It just ruins all motivation for me, since I'm not actually creating anything, I'm just making things smoother in the middle. Why can't it just exist as a thing? I know I can't run it without money, I know I can't convince anyone to help me with the project without money. Especially in a country like mine where people just can't afford to work on things for free.

So, I wanted to ask if there are any resources or books I could study on financing a product in a sort of non-capitalist way? I'm sorry if I sound dumb I don't have much idea about this.

TL;DR: how to run a service/business without going broke and without feeling shit

  • cheese [any]
    hexagon
    ·
    1 year ago

    Hey, thank you for the long response. I'm saving this since I really needed this kind of overview. You're right about the success condition: I do rely on cultural and local understanding. Rarely do we get an international artist here, so with only local gigs no one can use products like ticketmaster (or any other foreign service) because currency conversion makes them too expensive. Events are very unorganized and hands-on, so it is difficult to compete here without being involved in the scene themselves.

    And thank you for the "productivity increase is good" bit, I had not thought of that.