Writing
Writing to think, sharing to learn.
What changes when you stop thinking like a solo operator and start building with AI agents, automated systems, and software leverage baked into the business from day one.
For years, I focused more on mastering the craft than building a social media presence. Most of my time went into learning, building, and helping others. Now that the foundation is in place, I’m ready to share more of the journey.
The moment I stopped over-engineering and started putting products in front of real users, everything changed. Perfection is a trap — shipping is the real competitive advantage.
Vibe coding isn't cutting corners — it's working with AI as a pair programmer. I describe what I want, iterate fast, and focus on the product instead of the syntax. Here's how that actually works day to day.
Too many founders build software and forget the "service" part. The best SaaS products aren't just functional — they remove friction, save time, and make people feel like the product actually cares about their workflow.
I don't use AI as a feature — I use it as a team member. From handling client outreach to running operations, here's what happens when you treat AI like your first hire instead of your last resort.
You don't need a CS degree to build real products. Between AI coding assistants, no-code tools, and a willingness to learn by doing, the barrier to building has never been lower. I proved that myself.
Every SaaS starts by solving a problem for one person — usually yourself. The hard part is deciding when to generalize. I break down how I think about that transition without losing what made the product special.