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14 December 2025

  • 16:4216:42, 14 December 2025 Vibe Coding 101: How AI Lets You Build a SaaS Startup in Hours (Not Weeks) — A Beginner’s Guide (hist | edit) [6,400 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "If you’re not a programmer. Maybe you’re a marketer, a teacher, or just someone with a killer idea scribbled on a napkin. But in 2025, you don’t need a CS degree to build and launch a SaaS (Software as a Service) product. Enter vibe coding — a fresh, intuitive approach to app development where you describe your “vibe” (the feel, features, and flow of your app) in plain English, and AI does the heavy lifting. No syntax errors, no endless debugging. Just you, d...")
  • 16:3916:39, 14 December 2025 The 2 Types of Churn in SaaS (Why Users Really Cancel) (hist | edit) [13,234 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px In SaaS, churn is the silent killer. It quietly erodes your MRR every month, forcing you to constantly refill the tank just to stay where you are. After watching thousands of users churn at different SaaS companies I’ve been a part of, I’ve come to the realization that: People churn for 1,321 different reasons, but every single reason fits into just two categories — “Your Fault” or “Their Problem.” And the only wa...")
  • 16:3716:37, 14 December 2025 Are spammers using your SaaS product as an attack vector? (hist | edit) [10,447 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Preventing invitee vector attacks, a type of vulnerability easily overlooked Your SaaS product is popular and thousands of people sign up for a new account or a trial every day. The daily dashboards show perpetual growth, and nearly all of these new accounts are legitimate. But what about the few that aren’t? I’d like to talk today about a threat that may be hiding underneath your radar: attackers may be using your website and marketing department to push fraudulent...")
  • 16:0716:07, 14 December 2025 GoHighLevel SaaS Mode Explained — How Agencies Can Scale Fast (hist | edit) [10,184 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px Introduction: The Future of Digital Agencies Is SaaS The digital marketing world is changing faster than ever. Agencies are no longer just offering one-time marketing services — they’re building scalable, recurring revenue models using software-as-a-service (SaaS). That’s where GoHighLevel SaaS Mode comes in. If you’ve been using GoHighLevel as a CRM or automation tool, you’ve only seen the tip of the i...")
  • 16:0016:00, 14 December 2025 Common Schema Design Patterns for SaaS — and How TiDB Helps (hist | edit) [7,093 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "When you’re building a SaaS app, the first big question about your database usually isn’t SQL or NoSQL, it’s — “Where should I put all my tenants’ data?” And that simple question opens a deep rabbit hole of schema design choices, trade-offs, and a few “oh no” moments you’ll only discover at scale. I’ve been there. Here’s how the journey usually goes — and how TiDB helps you survive it. Notice, what I will talk below is just in one database ins...")
  • 15:5815:58, 14 December 2025 My SaaS homepage design journey as a backend developer (hist | edit) [6,977 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "I’ve built Vigilant, a monitoring tool designed to monitor all aspects of your website. From basic uptime checks to more advanced checks like performance. user flows and public infrastructure. It started as an open source project and is now a SaaS using the open core structure. As a backend developer, design is not my strongest point. In this article I’m sharing the different revisions of the homepage and the feedback I’ve got from generous internet users with whi...")
  • 15:5415:54, 14 December 2025 What Is Digital Adoption in SaaS? Meaning, Examples & How to Get It Right (hist | edit) [27,678 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "For product managers, digital adoption is what separates users who quit after two weeks from those who become power users driving growth. A strong product adoption strategy cuts churn, lowers support costs, and makes your product essential to customers’ daily work. Users get more value, your revenue grows, and everyone wins. This guide explores what digital adoption means for SaaS and how to build a successful strategy that drives it. What is digital adoption? Digit...")
  • 15:4915:49, 14 December 2025 I Studied 50+ SaaS Founders — Here’s the Blind Spot They Never Notice (hist | edit) [5,745 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px Photo by Antonio Araujo on Unsplash A few years ago, I shut down my first startup. It took almost a year to rebuild myself as a founder. I went back to the basics: reading SaaS books, studying successful products, and learning from friends who’d built past $1M. It became the education I actually needed. Here’s the realisation about framing and positioning that changed everything for me. The Ride Home The guests are...")
  • 15:4615:46, 14 December 2025 Why Every SaaS Startup Needs an AI-Integrated Web App in 2026 (hist | edit) [7,751 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px The landscape of Software as a Service (SaaS) has undergone a seismic shift. As we navigate through 2026, the era of “static” software is officially over. We have moved past the phase where Artificial Intelligence (AI) was merely a buzzword or a flashy, optional add-on feature. Today, AI is the backbone of utility. For SaaS founders and startups, the marketplace has become hyper-competitive. Users no longer tole...")
  • 15:4415:44, 14 December 2025 Best AI Prompts for SaaS Ideas: Rank & Validate (hist | edit) [15,463 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Discover top AI prompts to generate & rank profitable SaaS ideas by opportunity & ease of entry. Get your next big startup concept now! 650px The AI Playbook I Use to Rank SaaS Ideas by Profit & Ease (Before I Build a Single Line of Code) There’s a silent graveyard of brilliant ideas living only in my Google Docs, scattered like digital tumbleweeds across various hard drives. For years, I pursued them with the kind of misgu...")
  • 15:4015:40, 14 December 2025 Why I Chose Trunk-Based Development for My SaaS Product (And Why the Others Didn’t Work) (hist | edit) [6,119 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "When building a SaaS product, one of the most critical decisions you’ll make is: How will the team work, how will code flow, will processes control us or will we control the process? My approach was clear from the start: No extra overhead, focus on the core product. Less operations, more work. We were a small team but highly productive. That’s why we needed to find the Git strategy that fit us best — not just follow “what everyone’s hyping about.” We tried...")
  • 15:3715:37, 14 December 2025 Still Confused About IaaS, PaaS, and SaaS? This Azure Chart Finally Makes It Click (hist | edit) [13,145 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "After decades in software engineering, I’ve watched countless developers struggle with the IaaS, PaaS, and SaaS distinction. Today, I’m breaking it down the way I wish someone had explained it to me years ago. 650px The Pizza Analogy Everyone Gets Wrong Forget the overused pizza analogy. Think of cloud computing like building a house. With IaaS, you get the land and foundation you build everything else. With PaaS, you ge...")
  • 15:3415:34, 14 December 2025 10 Mistakes AI SaaS Startups Make With Data Privacy (hist | edit) [8,235 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "You think you’re a “tech founder.” You’re a “data liability.” You’re so obsessed with “training your model” and “getting more data” that you’ve become a walking, talking, GDPR lawsuit. You’re a ticking time bomb, one “hack” away from total annihilation. You’re treating your users’ private data — their secrets, their customer lists, their private DMs — like it’s your property. You’re feeding it to your AI, storing it in plain t...")
  • 15:3315:33, 14 December 2025 Safe-by-Design n8n for SaaS: Multi-Tenant Automation That Scales (hist | edit) [10,080 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px Learn a secure multi-tenant n8n architecture for SaaS: isolation models, secrets, RBAC, rate limiting, queueing, audit, and upgrade strategy — plus code and diagrams. Let’s be real: customers don’t just want automation — they want automation they can trust. If your SaaS runs n8n for each client’s workflows, a leaky boundary or noisy neighbor can end a deal fast. Here’s a pragmatic blueprint to ship multi-tenant n8n tha...")
  • 15:3115:31, 14 December 2025 Here’s How I Found a Winning SaaS Idea and Built It in Just 3 Hours (hist | edit) [3,893 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px After building 6 SaaS projects in half a year, I realised something… It’s never been easier to make money online. But you need the right tools and the right ideas. Today I want to give you both of those. The other day I was bored, so I thought I would give myself a bit of a challenge. My goal: build a winning SaaS (feature) in under a day. I ended up creating something insane in just 3 hours. This is where...")
  • 15:3015:30, 14 December 2025 Building an Active-Active Multi-Region SaaS Architecture on AWS ECS & Fargate (hist | edit) [14,642 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Why Multi-Region SaaS Architecture Matters In a world where SaaS platforms serve users across continents, availability and latency define customer trust. If your application goes down in one region, your users shouldn’t even notice. That’s where Active-Active multi-region architecture comes in distributing workloads, data, and routing across multiple AWS regions to ensure high availability, low latency, and resilience by design. Unlike traditional Active-Passive or...")
  • 15:2415:24, 14 December 2025 How To Scale Your AI SaaS Without Burning Out Even If You Handle Everything Solo (hist | edit) [5,622 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "You’re a victim of your own success. You’re the CEO, the lead (only) developer, the chief marketing officer, and the entire customer support team. You’re grinding 16-hour days, fueled by caffeine and the fear of your Stripe account flatlining. You’re not “scaling.” You’re just stretching. Every new user, every new feature, every new bug report adds another 10-pound weight to your back. You’re not building a business; you’re building a high-stress, lo...")
  • 15:2215:22, 14 December 2025 Smart AI Business Idea 2:Vertical AI SaaS for Local Services (hist | edit) [12,339 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px Hi guys, I am back again with another intersting idea… Okay alright, so I was reading about what VCs are actually funding in 2025 and I kept seeing this pattern I couldn’t ignore. There’s this company called Barti. It’s an AI system for eye care clinics that automates patient booking, doctor scheduling, and follow-ups. They raised $12 million Series A in 2024. Another one: Nautilus. It’s an AI operating system for...")
  • 15:1915:19, 14 December 2025 I Launched My First Micro-SaaS With Astro, Clerk, Appwrite & Stripe (hist | edit) [3,814 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px This week I shipped my first micro-SaaS, LudumLanding, a landing-page generator for indie game developers. It’s built with Astro, Clerk, Appwrite, and Stripe… and right now I have exactly: users = 0 revenue = 0 motivation = 100 This is an article about the build, the stack, the challenges, and what it feels like to launch something from scratch with *zero* traction. The Idea Indie developers often struggle to cre...")
  • 15:1815:18, 14 December 2025 Multi-Tenant ASP.NET Core SaaS Applications: Architecture Patterns that Scale (hist | edit) [5,399 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "How to design, implement, and scale SaaS platforms with tenant isolation, shared resources, and predictable performance. Introduction Building a SaaS product is not just about shipping features, it’s about building an engine that scales gracefully. When your app moves from serving a handful of customers to hundreds or thousands, multi-tenancy becomes the backbone of your architecture. ASP.NET Core provides powerful abstractions and extensibility points that make mul...")
  • 15:1415:14, 14 December 2025 Building ReviewMaster AI: A Solo Developer’s Angular MVP Journey to SaaS Success (hist | edit) [8,031 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px Welcome to part three of “Zero to SaaS in 14 Days,” my real-world series where I build, launch, and document a SaaS product in just two weeks. In part one, I created a Subscription Tracker, and in part two, a Job Application Tracker. Now, I’m excited to share ReviewMaster AI, an app that makes managing customer reviews easier and smarter. It uses AI to suggest replies you can quickly edit and helps you keep track of...")
  • 15:1015:10, 14 December 2025 I Added ‘ChatGPT-Like’ Search To Our SaaS And Support Tickets 10x’d (hist | edit) [13,548 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "A cautionary tale about confusing magic with reliability. Based on real experiences building AI features in B2B SaaS — names and details changed to protect the innocent (and guilty). 650px Monday morning: Marketing popped champagne bottles. Friday afternoon: Support threatened to quit en masse. The crime? I shipped a “conversational AI search” powered by RAG that transformed our reliable keyword filter into an eloqu...")
  • 15:0615:06, 14 December 2025 Not all SaaS are built equal. Designing for Critical Systems (hist | edit) [5,068 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px Photo by Алекс Арцибашев on Unsplash At first glance, every SaaS looks the same. A dashboard here, a clean UI there, a chart that makes you feel productive. But once you peek under the hood, you realize not all SaaS live in the same universe. Some are built for convenience. Others, for consequence. And at Jisr, we build in the second category. The illusion of sameness Most SaaS tools want to help you move...")
  • 15:0315:03, 14 December 2025 Laravel Queue Failover: The Hidden Hero of SaaS Stability (hist | edit) [5,409 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Six real-world examples of failover in action — and the lessons that separate fragile apps from bulletproof platforms 650px When you’re building a SaaS product, background jobs are the silent workhorses — sending emails, processing payments, syncing data. But what happens when your queue driver fails at 3 AM and jobs vanish into the void? That’s where Laravel’s failover queue driver becomes a game-changer. Let’s dive int...")
  • 07:1307:13, 14 December 2025 Stop Confusing Your Users: Rewrite Your SaaS Homepage Headline to Drive Signups in 10 Minutes (hist | edit) [7,420 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px If your homepage headline isn’t clear in 5 seconds, you’re losing conversions. Here’s a teardown that shows how to turn confusion into clarity and clicks. SaaS Founders and Growth Leads — This Is for You You’ve spent months building your product. You’ve invested in paid ads, landing pages, and onboarding flows. But visitors still bounce. Signups crawl. You tweak colors, pricing, CTAs, and UX flows, yet nothing mo...")
  • 07:0907:09, 14 December 2025 Multi-Tenant SaaS Architecture: The Database Decision That Will Haunt You (hist | edit) [24,942 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px Three months after launching our SaaS product, we had a problem. A good problem: customers were signing up faster than expected. A bad problem: our single-database architecture was becoming a nightmare. Customer A wanted their data in Europe for GDPR. Customer B needed special performance SLAs. Customer C wanted to audit every database query. And we had built everything assuming one database for everyone. The rebuild t...")
  • 07:0407:04, 14 December 2025 I Built a Micro-SaaS to Help Clients Understand My Prices (hist | edit) [7,470 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "I used to think I was bad at planning.
But over time I realized the problem wasn’t my hours, it was my structure. My proposals looked clean and professional, but they didn’t show what was behind the numbers. When it finally clicked One day I got fed up and decided to break a project down properly.
No more “Phase 1: Design” or “Phase 2: Development.”
Instead, I listed everything step by step. * One-time costs like design, setup, and integrations *...")
  • 06:5506:55, 14 December 2025 Shipping an AI Micro-SaaS in a Weekend (hist | edit) [9,022 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650ppx Learn how to ship an AI micro-SaaS in a weekend: pick a winnable niche, design a lean architecture, write production-ready code, price smartly, and launch fast. Weekends are short. Deadlines are rude. And yet, nothing sharpens a product like building it under friendly pressure. Here’s exactly how I shipped an AI micro-SaaS between Friday night and Sunday evening — and got first revenue before Monday. The Weekend Co...")
  • 06:5106:51, 14 December 2025 How SaaS Builders Can Actually Use Data as a Service(DaaS)-And Not Mess It Up (hist | edit) [6,070 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px Look, if you’ve built a SaaS product, you already know the drill.
Building the thing? That’s the easy part. Almost fun, actually. The hard part? Figuring out what the hell your users are doing once they’re inside.
You think you know. You’ve done the research, talked to customers, built personas. Then you check the actual data… and realize half of them are using your product in ways you never imagined. The o...")
  • 06:4706:47, 14 December 2025 The “Regex Nightmare” Hiding a Six-Figure SaaS: the simple API Business (hist | edit) [7,277 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px When you see a developer wrestling with LayoutLMv3, YOLOv8, and a dozen other open-source tools, you haven't just found a problem. You've found a market. I found this issue on r/LocalLLaMA subreddit. A developer laid out their struggle in excruciating detail: they needed to pull transaction data from PDF bank statements. Here’s the core of their problem: “The challenge is that the Regex approach is brittle, and very se...")
  • 06:4406:44, 14 December 2025 How to Prioritize Features in Your SaaS MVP (hist | edit) [12,913 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px Executive Summary Launching a startup is full of opportunities, but it is also marked by significant risk. Around 35% of new ventures fail because their products do not meet a genuine market need [1]. This highlights why validating an idea early is essential for building a sustainable business. A Minimum Viable Product (MVP) plays a central role in this validation. Rather than being a stripped-down demo, an MVP is a funct...")
  • 06:3906:39, 14 December 2025 ChatGPT in 2025: The SaaS Survival Guide for 2026 (hist | edit) [8,521 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px You’re up against the experiences individuals have every day on ChatGPT.
ChatGPT isn’t just “that chatbot that writes emails” anymore in 2025. It’s becoming a comprehensive AI platform with built-in apps, commerce, agents, and search capabilities. According to TechCrunch, it now serves hundreds of millions of people, and new features are added every month. This is a big change for SaaS founders, product...")
  • 06:3706:37, 14 December 2025 Christmas KDP (Micro SaaS Review: Pros, Cons & ROI (hist | edit) [7,201 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Christmas KDP (Micro SaaS Review): A fast path to holiday-ready KDP and Etsy listings. The holiday rush is short. Ideas pile up while time runs out. If you sell low‑content books, printables, or PLR on Amazon KDP or Etsy, you know the pain. You need quick niche research, ready interiors, clean covers, and SEO that helps you rank before Christmas buyers flood in. Christmas KDP (Micro SaaS Review) promises a faster workflow from idea to publish. It aims to cut design ti...")
  • 06:3206:32, 14 December 2025 I Analyzed 52 SaaS Documentation Sites. 89% Are Wasting Hours on Manual Numbering (hist | edit) [18,093 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px Photo by Vitaly Gariev on Unsplash TL;DR: I audited 52 documentation sites and found 89% manually number content, wasting 2–3 hours per week on maintenance. CSS counters automate this completely zero errors, instant updates, 70% time savings. The feature has 16 years of browser support but 82% of developers have never heard of it. Below: the data, a simple framework, and the productivity gap nobody talks about. Your c...")
  • 04:5904:59, 14 December 2025 How to Find Micro SaaS Ideas People Are Already Begging to Pay For: The Complete Validation System (hist | edit) [21,641 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px I wasted $4,800 and three months building a productivity app nobody wanted. The worst part? I could have known it would fail in 72 hours. Here’s what happened: I had this “brilliant” idea. I spent two months coding. Three weeks perfecting the UI. Launch day came — 12 sign-ups, 3 active users, zero paying customers. I built something nobody needed. Since then, I’ve studied 200+ successful Micro SaaS founders maki...")
  • 04:5304:53, 14 December 2025 My Brutally Simple SEO Keyword Strategy That Generated $2.3M in SaaS Annual Revenue (hist | edit) [7,087 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px Image Created By Author Most founders & SEO experts are playing the wrong game. They obsess over domain authority. They celebrate page-one rankings for broad terms. They pump out “ultimate guides” that get thousands of visits but zero trials. Here’s the truth: Rankings mean nothing if they don’t contribute to revenue. As a Growth-focused SEO manager for SaaS brands, I don’t care much about traffic. My obse...")
  • 04:5004:50, 14 December 2025 The Indie SaaS KPI You’re Not Tracking (hist | edit) [8,698 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px The overlooked KPI for indie SaaS: Time-to-Meaningful Outcome. Learn how TTMO boosts activation, retention, and expansion with examples and SQL. Let’s be real: most indie SaaS dashboards look the same — MRR, churn, LTV, CAC, activation rate, maybe a funnel that quietly gaslights you at 2 a.m. Useful? Sure. Complete? Not even close. The KPI almost no one tracks — yet everyone feels — is Time-to-Meani...")
  • 04:4604:46, 14 December 2025 5 Stages to Find Product Market Fit For SaaS! (hist | edit) [6,492 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px Image by: https://unsplash.com/@enikoo Making a product a Product Market Fit is a process that happens over time; it’s not something that you do in one day and forget about it the next morning. The more you research and work with clients, the clearer pictures get, and you shape your product as a perfect fit for the market. Let’s try to understand different phases of a Product Market Fit, and where yo...")
  • 04:4404:44, 14 December 2025 Top 6 Frontend Frameworks That Will Dominate 2026 (And Fix Your SaaS UI Problems) (hist | edit) [8,645 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px With every extra second a dashboard takes to load, you’re losing potential growth. The solution often isn’t simply hiring more engineers; it lies in adopting a better tech stack. The right framework can eliminate friction, making your product feel fast, intuitive, and reliable. Here are six frameworks that are set to dominate SaaS in 2026. And how each one transforms friction into fluidity. I’ll also share some market...")
  • 04:4104:41, 14 December 2025 How to Build Your First AI SaaS in 7 Simple Steps (hist | edit) [5,357 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px Photo by Catherine Breslin on Unsplash There is a wave happening in tech right now. Developers, freelancers and students are launching small AI SaaS tools and turning them into real products. Some are earning a few hundred dollars a month. Some are earning five figures. And many of these products began with a single person and a very small idea. The truth is: you do not need a complex model, a large...")
  • 04:3804:38, 14 December 2025 How to Protect Your AI SaaS From Prompt Injection and Bad Users (hist | edit) [9,234 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Learn how to stop prompt injection attacks in AI chatbots, SaaS applications, and generative AI tools using a smart LLM-as-a-Judge security layer for safe and reliable responses. 500px Let’s start with a fact! AI-powered SaaS tools are exploding, from personal tutors and legal assistants to content generators and data copilots.
But as developers, we quickly learn something unsettling: users don’t always play nice. Your a...")
  • 04:3304:33, 14 December 2025 How OpenAI Atlas Can Boost SaaS Frontend Development in 2026 (hist | edit) [10,744 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Writing clean code and launching quickly are no longer the main goals of SaaS development in 2026. Instead, the focus is on creating applications that are intelligent, flexible, and user-first. OpenAI Atlas, a new ecosystem that is revolutionising the way frontend teams develop and scale SaaS products, is at the centre of this change. However, what exactly is OpenAI Atlas? And how can it assist SaaS teams struggling with sluggish UI delivery, antiquated processes, or U...")
  • 04:3004:30, 14 December 2025 SaaS: Stories of the Silent Revolution That Changed How We Work (hist | edit) [7,528 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px Every revolution has a beginning.
Some start with protests.
Some with inventions.
But the revolution we live inside right now — the one powering almost every modern business — started quietly, in small rooms, with frustrated founders trying to solve one simple problem: “Why is software so complicated?” This is the story of SaaS, not as a technology, but as a movement shaped by real people, real...")
  • 04:2704:27, 14 December 2025 The Billion-Dollar Complaint: A Single Reddit Thread Exposes a Perfect Micro-SaaS Idea (hist | edit) [7,617 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px Instead of trying to dream up a world-changing idea from scratch, let’s find one by listening to people complain on the internet. We’re looking for real people with real problems who are practically begging for someone to take their money. Today, our journey takes us into the land of Customer Relationship Management (CRM). With over 23% of the global CRM market share, according to Gartner, Salesforce is the undisputed...")
  • 04:2404:24, 14 December 2025 Build Faster Than Your Burnout: The AI Workflow Every Solo SaaS Founder Needs (hist | edit) [6,866 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "A free Claude Code Plugin for a complete feature workflow from brainstorming and planning to execution. Without the cognitive overload! As a solo developer or SaaS solopreneur you wear every hat: product manager, designer, tester and marketer. You’re expected to define features, gather requirements and build an MVP while debugging your own AI-generated code. That mental load is why many creators default to “vibe coding”. You are jumping straight into a project wit...")
  • 04:2004:20, 14 December 2025 The Only 3 SaaS Metrics That Matter Before $20K MRR (hist | edit) [9,571 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Stop tracking vanity metrics. Before $20K MRR, only 3 numbers matter: MRR growth, retention, and activation. Here’s why everything else is noise. I’ve noticed something about early-stage SaaS founders — we absolutely love our dashboards. The more colorful the graphs, the better. Funnels everywhere. Segments for days. Ratios that look impressive in investor decks. But I’ll be honest with you: before you hit $20K MRR, most of that is just noise. You don’t need...")
  • 04:1704:17, 14 December 2025 How One Founder Built Five SaaS Apps That Make $200,000 Every Month (hist | edit) [7,448 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px This is Mike, a quiet founder from Australia who built five different SaaS apps that now make over two hundred thousand dollars every single month. But what makes his story different is not just the numbers. It’s the method behind them. Every app he creates follows the same framework, the same repeatable system that seems almost impossible to fail. When I heard him say this, I was curious. I like to build ideas...")
  • 04:1504:15, 14 December 2025 The Quiet Token Heist: Why 2026’s Biggest SaaS Breaches Won’t Start With Passwords (hist | edit) [1,309 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px Passwords are now the decoy. 🔥 The scariest breaches heading into 2026 won’t kick the door in — they’ll stroll through the side entrance with a perfectly valid SaaS token. We just watched a real preview: the Salesloft/Drift OAuth fallout in August 2025 showed how one third-party integration can ripple across hundreds of customer environments. Multi-tenant blast radius, long-lived access, and a lot of “but MFA was on....")
  • 04:1204:12, 14 December 2025 Saas + AI = the Great Decoupling: How to Bypass SaaS in 2026 and Lead with AI (hist | edit) [19,655 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Listen to the Deep-Dive podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/episode/how-to-bypass-saas-in-2026-and-lead-with-ai--68843187 The prevailing doctrine of the current AI moment is “Acceleration.” We are told that the winners will be the “Supercompanies” — entities designed to move fast, break processes, and run on infinite leverage. The metric is velocity; the method is “cut and create.” But this doctrine carries a fatal flaw. By obsessing over how fast we can...")
  • 03:5903:59, 14 December 2025 Implementing MERN Real-Time Features in your SaaS application (hist | edit) [15,312 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px Introduction Modern SaaS users expect instant feedback. They want live chat that responds without delays, dashboards that update the second data changes, and notifications that arrive as events happen. This demand for immediacy makes MERN real-time features a core part of today’s software ecosystem. For startups and enterprises alike, it is the standard that separates tools users enjoy from those they abandon. This blog...")
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