Building SaaS, breaking things, and automating income. Go / NestJS/ ReactNative 🚀 This year: 10 SaaS in 10 months. Let’s see what works. Follow for startup insights, tech deep dives & growth lessons.
1. Mainly hacking on GoCraft this weekend (open-source Go microservice generator). Trying to make backend setup as easy as go run. 2. Outside of that, I’ll relax with a long run + some time offline 🏃♂️✨.
Quick peek: project generator UI — pick framework, choose features, review, generate. No more copy/pasting boilerplate. #devtools #golang #opensource #Gophers
If you're a founder Focus on: - Solving a problem - Targeting 1 ICP - Focusing on 1 channel Simplicity scales more than fancy systems.
SaaS in 2025: Dev - Cursor Design - Figma Payments - Stripe Backend - Supabase Hosting - Vercel Leads - Enrichlead Support - Crisp All you need in 1 post.
Solo developers have a huge edge: No meetings No investors No slow decision-making Just you, your laptop, and execution speed. The real challenge? 🔹 Choosing the right problem 🔹 Selling, not just coding 🔹 Staying consistent Who else is shipping solo?
Learning Go: Step 1: Fight the urge to use OOP. Step 2: Panic when you see interface{}. Step 3: Accept that goroutines are magic. Step 4: Never look back.
Most developers overcomplicate SaaS: - You don’t need microservices. - You don’t need the ‘perfect’ stack. - You don’t need funding. All you need? A problem worth solving & customers willing to pay. Speed > Perfection
Being a solo dev is an unfair advantage. You can build and ship SaaS without hiring anyone. But the real skill? - Finding a niche - Selling before building - Marketing & distribution Coding is just 20% of the game. Who else is building solo?
Backend engineers who build SaaS → unfair advantage. You can turn ideas into real products without hiring devs. But coding is just 20% of the game. The real challenge? Marketing, sales & distribution. Master that, and you print money. Who else is coding SaaS solo?
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