gabideveloper's profile picture. I talk about SaaS and coding • Founder @ http://Critiquely.app

Gabi

@gabideveloper

I talk about SaaS and coding • Founder @ http://Critiquely.app

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The wild part about tech is this: That little side project you’re hacking on could end up being the thing millions of people rely on every day.


Momentum > motivation. Keep moving, even if it’s little.


Ship the MVP. You’ll learn more from one real user than a hundred guesses.


Launch early. Take feedback. Adjust. Do it again. That’s how ideas evolve.


Show up. Do the work. Even when it’s boring. Especially when it’s boring. That’s how you get better.


You don’t need a huge budget to start anymore. You just need to start.


Some days you show up inspired. Some days you just show up. Both count.


Fix one bug. Three more appear. The circle of life.


Real growth comes from paying attention to feedback, day after day.


Move fast. Break stuff. Then fix it. Then improve it again. Repeat. The faster you iterate, the sooner your idea becomes something real.


Most people don’t realize how many SaaS ideas come from solving your own problems.


Nothing compares to the first time someone signs up for something you built from scratch.


Building a SaaS is 20% code, 80% talking to users.


Selling a SaaS product isn't just about features. It's about understanding the problem better than anyone else.


The best high in programming isn’t shipping features. It’s finally killing the bug that’s been haunting you all day.


What's one thing you wish you knew before building your first SaaS?


The best developers are the ones who: - Aren’t afraid to ship unfinished - Keep things simple - Build what’s needed, not what’s cool - Listen to feedback Focus on what matters.


You don’t need 100 features. You need 100 users who love 1 feature.


You’re not just building a SaaS. You’re building the future you want to live in.


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