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Yuko Fukushima

Hello, Anna.

First, congratulations on your landing page.
It is clean looking site with a cute logo.

I just scanned the website, and here's my thought.

  1. It's unclear that why people need to choose Racoon aside from other podcast community? . What's the difference?
  2. How would the membership subscription improve my podcast? (it's also unclear for me but probably because I don't have one.)
  3. maybe first section is too much plain text. I gave up reading after 5 second.

With that said, it's my opinion after all. It looks good anyway. 👏

If you want other's opinion, you can privately talk to @alexanderkluge. He has roasted many landing pages.

Thanks for heads up! :D

For the moment it will be just a handful number of people (or nobody but me), so that should be alright.

Yeah, let's see how it goes ✌️

I've just signed up with Basecamp.
I amazed I can do so much even with free account. The all-in-one solution with simple UX looks great for a remote project with clients and/or collaborator. Thank you for letting me know, Alex! I will explore more to see what I can do with it. :)

Thank you so much for your answer, Jonas.

One of the collaborators is working in the same studio.
A physical board with "Todo," "Doing," and "Done" sounds like a great idea.
I didn't come up with the possibility as I'm a heavily digital-oriented person. I will give it a try.

For another person, the one who showed a kinda panicked reaction to Notion - she suggested me to use Slack together on the other day. It was quite surprising for me. She said that she found it useful when she communicates with her business partner with slack.
It was a great suggestion from her. While I can record and share the overview of the tasks without forcing her to install new tools.

Awesome! 😎 I'm happy for you 😊

→"a particular program that scrabbles the HTML"
Do any of you know there is a similar open-source code out there? 🤔😍

Good idea!

It would be great if we can have an opportunity to get to know and learn more from them.
Also, probably some influencers want to pay for the community in the end.

Yeah they'd still have the option to upgrade to a paid membership.

It depends on what kind of community you are looking for.

What you want is a closed community like wip.chat, check out this group. :)
t.me/fordesignrs It's almost like a sub-group of WIP but for designers.

I have the same problem as your girlfriend.

I'm trying to stop taking a new illustration client work and move on to fine art and making products.
I hope my projects will be somewhat profitable soon to support my life, and I don't think it will be within 2020.
So I'm looking for better payment remote jobs - and I think most of the time they are somewhere around the tech industry.

For example, if you have basic knowledge of programming and motivation for customer care, you can apply to customer support.
remoteok.io/remote-non-tech-j…

Saying is easy, but in reality, you have to compete with hundreds of people with experiences.
I've applied to some tech support and junior engineer jobs on remoteok.io, but I haven't got any reply yet.

Searching for tech internships for carrier changer or paid front engineer training programs are also what I look for now.
Anybody who reads this page and know something about those, please let us know!

We are currently exploring a few options. First one is test.io, they give 3 test tasks to find bugs on sites like nike.com and then you can look for bugs for real websites in development with pay of approximately 5 USD per issue found. Second one, is providing video editing services for YouTubers. Will see how it goes..

hehe, i'm of course on setapp! and I got its discounted subscription on stacksocial.com. they sometimes sell 50% off membership there for limited-time such as black friday. but as they grow bigger, I'm not sure they'll do it again, though.

app sumo is not always good for creators, but sometimes we have to buy something, and which case it's good.

In my case,
(aside from my servers, major social media and the listed sites above)
it's all about saving money.

  1. Appsumo.com
    Quality of their lifetime deals are varied, but sometimes you can find gem deals which you can replace your ongoing subscription products.
    Also, they are very good at marketing and copywriting, so you can learn a business strategy from them

  2. Trustedhousesitters.com
    being a cat lover and not earning enough to afford the rents in Europe, I do housesit to get a place to sleep... and lovely cats😍

  3. Couchsurfing.com
    When the housesitting plan falls back, and there's no friend's place to crash on, I go with CF often. I made a lot of friends on my way of travelling while staying with local people.

(This is not exactly a website, but it aligns with my websites choice)
4. Too good to go
You can get soon-to-expired/expired-but-still-good food at a reasonably discounted price.

If you have any money-saving website recommendation, please let me know 😂

Wow your list is so cool. Appsumo is cool for buyers but not for creators AFAICT. I didn't know about pet housesitting. That's such a fun thing to do. Couchsurfing sounds awesome too. Not into pets 🙈 but I'd definitely do Couchsurfing someday. Your life is definitely interesting. Honestly, I think this was the answer I was looking for 😂

I think you forgot to add #4. What kind of money-saving websites recommendations do you exactly want? I know about Setapp if you use a Mac.

hehe, i'm of course on setapp! and I got its discounted subscription on stacksocial.com. they sometimes sell 50% off membership there for limited-time such as black friday. but as they grow bigger, I'm not sure they'll do it again, though.

app sumo is not always good for creators, but sometimes we have to buy something, and which case it's good.