Most solo founders using AI agents are managing them terribly. Here's the framework that turns disjointed prompts into an actual team structure.
I spent $800 on AI tools last month. Claude, Cursor, Lovable, Obsidian and more. Here's the workflow that 3x'd my shipping velocity.
I crashed at my desk on a Tuesday. Not from overwork. From decision fatigue. Here's the 60-minute ritual that saved me.
I run 15 AI agents as if they were employees. Org chart, performance reviews, the whole thing. Most people treating AI like a toy are missing this.
Getting first customers is not about finding the right channel. It is about understanding the mechanism that drives a stranger to pay you money. After analyzing 47 case studies, one pattern dominates.
Cursor went from a failed CAD tool to $1B+ ARR faster than any SaaS company in history. Every competitor is cloning their approach. None of them understand why it works.
Bolt.new went from a failing gaming startup to $40M ARR in 18 months. The pivot was brutal, the timing was luck, and the lesson is uglier than you think.
AI can generate anything but it cannot generate taste. After analyzing the most successful indie hackers, the ones who thrive share one trait: better decisions about what to build.
The $500 MRR plateau is not a skill problem. It's a focus problem. Here's the diagnostic framework that separates founders who break through from ones who stall forever.
After analyzing 50 accounts over 18 months, the winners share one trait: they document decisions, not updates. Here's the framework that separates 10K followers from 100.