Turned 30 today.
Left the 9–5 behind.
Got a one-way ticket.
Launched my first product.
Hit $100+ MRR in a few weeks.
Met creators I used to only follow.
Stopped caring about “safe paths.”
Calling this chapter: living.
Just finished building text feature for PostMaker.
Still buggy. Alignments are off.
Can't wait to wake up and fix it tomorrow.
This is what building feels like right 😃
Stop posting on X.
Seriously.
If you're under 500 followers, every tweet you publish is not worth the time.
Here's what I figured out after wasting weeks making tweets:
You're playing the wrong game for your follower count.
I call it the "Engagement Ladder".
And 90% of people are on the positioning themselves on the wrong rung.
The brutal truth:
Until you hit critical mass, nobody cares about:
→ Your morning routine
→ Your hot takes
→ Your project updates
→ Your motivational wisdom
They don't care because they don't know you yet.
You haven't earned the right to flex.
Ever copy a viral tweet from a 50k account and get 2 likes?
"Hard work beats talent" gets them 8,000 likes.
You post the same thing → 3 likes, 1 from that random account with a picture of a cat.
It's not the content. It's the ladder.
Here's the actual Engagement Ladder:
STAGE 1: 0-500 followers: STOP POSTING. START REPLYING.
Your tweets get zero algorithmic reach.
You're invisible.
So stop screaming into the void.
Instead: 100 replies per day to trending posts in your niche.
Make yourself visible in OTHER people's comments.
That's the only strategy that works at this level.
500-3,000 followers: VALUE ONLY
Now you can tweet.
But ONLY tactical lessons they can use today.
"Here's how I got 1,000 users"
"The exact cold email that got 30% replies"
"My Cursor setup that saves 10 hours/week"
No fluff. No motivation. No "building in public" updates.
Nobody cares about your journey (yet).
Give them something they can steal.
STAGE 2: 3,000-10,000 followers: OPINIONS UNLOCKED
Now you can share takes.
"Here's why no-code is dead"
"Agencies > SaaS for first-time founders"
"Y Combinator is overrated"
You have enough credibility that people want to hear your POV.
But it still needs to teach something.
STAGE 3: 10,000-100,000 followers: LIFESTYLE FLEX TIME
This is where you can post:
→ "Coding from a beach in Bali"
→ "My morning routine as a 6-figure founder"
→ "What I had for breakfast"
People know you now. They're invested in your journey.
The mundane becomes interesting because they care about YOU.
STAGE 4: 100,000+ followers: POST WHATEVER YOU WANT
Politics rants. Random thoughts. Shower wisdom.
At this scale, you're a personality.
People follow for you, not just your content.
Why this matters:
Most people try to skip rungs.
They're at 800 followers posting:
"Building in public! Day 47 of my SaaS journey 🚀"
Zero engagement.
Meanwhile, someone with 80k posts the same thing and gets 500 likes.
Same content. Different rung.
The mistake I see everywhere:
People at 1,000 followers trying to post like they're at 50k.
Motivational quotes. Morning routines. Hot takes on politics.
Nobody cares.
You haven't earned that yet.
What actually works:
Match your content to your rung:
Under 500? Don't post. Just engage.
500-3k? You're a teacher, not a personality.
Teach. Give tactical value. Make them smarter in 60 seconds.
Save the flexing for when you have 10k+.
The controversial part:
Those "inspiring" tweets from big accounts?
They're not what got them big.
They got big by providing insane value when they were small.
Now they've earned the right to post lazy motivation.
You haven't.
Based on my learning of this platform:
Stop trying to be motivational.
Stop sharing your "journey."
Stop posting your hot takes.
If you're under 500 (lik me), stop posting completely. Just reply.
If you're 500-3k, stop posting anything that isn't pure value.
Until you're over 3,000 followers, you're invisible.
So give value so good they can't ignore you.
Teach them something worth stealing. Every. Single. Tweet.
The Engagement Ladder is real.
Know which rung you're on.
Or keep wondering why your posts get 3 likes while the same content from big accounts gets 3,000.
This is my workstation. It was built for gaming but it has seen more building than it has seen gaming. And I plan to keep that up.
How does your work setup look like?
Day 9:
Setting up push notifications using expo wasn't as easy as I thought it would be.
I got it working after hours of debugging and it was so satisfying. Next step: buy an old iPhone for testing.
Day 8:
I just got the logo and app icon designs back. I don't know how to feel. I'm happy, but at the same time, it's here that my doubts start to kick in.
Are you team native development or more the React Native way?
I just recently started working with React Native, I really like the fact that we can build once and then deploy on iOS and Android but I think that I'll hit a roadblock somewhere (FOR SURE)
Growing from $1K MRR to $2K MRR is harder than I thought.
It's already a month since PDF Vector hit $1K MRR and we're still struggling to get to $2K MRR.
This SaaS thing is tough!
@lukecodez Funny enough, GML = game maker language.
This was back in 2012 when I was only 14. I wanted to make games so bad that I spent days learning Game Maker
A year ago, If this video hadn’t appeared on my feed, I would have never even tried building apps.
- I wouldn’t be at 11.5K followers today.
- I would still be at $0 (totally dependent on my parents for everything)
- People would still be calling me an idiot.
But today, I want to take a moment to thank my inspiration @marclou. 👑
I’m 27.
If you’re 16–27, this is for you.
Start creating online.
Write. Record. Publish.
Every day.
Build a personal brand.
Solve your problems.
Sell the solution.
This will give you freedom.
I made $4K on my first project
took 15 hours total
still had my corporate job. did it on a weekend
That's more than I made in a month at my $24K/year job.
I thought it was luck.
Second project: $3K for 12 hours.
Third: $5k for 20 hours.
Not luck.
That's just what the market actually pays for dev work.
Corporate had me thinking $24K was normal. It's not.
The same skills they paid me poverty wages for?
Worth $150-200/hour to businesses with actual problems.
I quit 3 months after that first project.
If you can code, you can build yourself.
The clients are there.
The money is real.
You just have to start.