It looks pretty neat, but I'm not going to pay before trying something out. I don't even necessarily need to use it on my own site, but seeing the themes, customizing the widget, etc. I'd want to play with it before paying money.
By the way I really like the website and how you've laid the features out. Looks like a really neat tool.
I've never actually been in a corporate gig, only worked for small businesses, usually directly for the owner(s). But after running my own web dev company for awhile, I was recruited to work for a small finance company.
I enjoyed being on my own, and the pay was fine, but I really like this job. I have one boss to worry about (and he's awesome) instead of 5-10+ clients at any given time, my coworkers are nice and friendly (but not too much), and I'm getting paid really, really well.
This job is way better, but I think the biggest reason is because of the culture here, plus the pay.
- I don't typically work outside of 9 to 5
- I get paid every week no matter how much work I do (hello paid vacations, it's been awhile)
- My boss usually has an idea for a thing to do, and then I do it
- If I have an idea, boss will let me run with it unless there's a good reason not to
- There's very little back and forth with picky clients who don't know how to tell me what they're looking for
- I don't have to worry about finding revenue and keeping expenses in check
While I do sometimes think about work stuff all the time (how many times has the solution to a problem materialized when I'm in the shower after I've been thinking about it for 3 days?!), I don't feel guilty and I'll just send myself an email and tackle it on Monday.
A lot of banks charge fees for business checking accounts, so I recommend finding a credit union. If Navy Federal is in your area, they are excellent. I have five [free] business checking accounts with them, and haven't had any issues.
I also have an account with Azlo, which has been pretty good, but I don't think they support paper checks.
Setup a filter in $new email that labels all mail received on the $old address, so you know where you need to update your email address
Keep this until you don't have any more emails coming in with that $old label for ... however long you're comfortable, 6 months, 1 year, forever. Unless there's a reason you need to decommission the $old one, I'd just leave it there
By the way I really like the website and how you've laid the features out. Looks like a really neat tool.