Mehdi Haideri

226 posts

Mehdi Haideri banner
Mehdi Haideri

Mehdi Haideri

@HeyMehdiH

AI insights + product innovation | Building in public & creating tools that make work smarter.

Universe शामिल हुए Ocak 2026
21 फ़ॉलोइंग10 फ़ॉलोवर्स
पिन किया गया ट्वीट
Mehdi Haideri
Mehdi Haideri@HeyMehdiH·
Build first. Refine later. Most people delay because they want it perfect. But perfection is just procrastination in disguise. Ship the messy version. Feedback will improve it faster than your overthinking ever could.
English
0
0
2
66
Mehdi Haideri
Mehdi Haideri@HeyMehdiH·
@NickDiFabio1 The map doesn’t matter if you haven’t taken the first step on the road.
English
0
0
1
12
Nick Di Fabio
Nick Di Fabio@NickDiFabio1·
People overthink the wrong things. "Should I get an LLC?" "What about a trademark?" "Which software do I need?" You haven't published a single profitable book yet. That's like entering a gas station into your GPS before entering your destination. The destination is a published book making royalties. Focus on that. You'll naturally stop for gas when you need to.
English
1
1
11
893
Mehdi Haideri
Mehdi Haideri@HeyMehdiH·
You don’t need a team of 20. You need a system that runs like a team of 20. 💡 Most founders think scale = more people.
Smart founders know: scale = process + leverage + automation. One person can ship the work of 20 if the system is built right: •AI handles research & reporting •Automation runs workflows 24/7 •Feedback loops improve results without extra heads Stop hiring more people. 
Start building a system that works while you sleep.
English
0
0
2
18
Stijn Noorman
Stijn Noorman@stijnnoorman·
I quit X. After 3 months. Because I only hit 183 followers. This mistake cost me 6 months of progress. I might have been at 100K now if I didn't quit. So don't quit like me. Trust the process.
English
143
13
254
8K
Mehdi Haideri
Mehdi Haideri@HeyMehdiH·
@AnnaCher___ Spot on. The best tools lose to the one with better reach, better timing, and better placement every time.
English
0
0
0
10
Anna Cher
Anna Cher@AnnaCher___·
@HeyMehdiH distribution is the one nobody wants to talk about. you can have the best workflow and still lose to the tool with the bigger email list.
English
1
0
2
14
Mehdi Haideri
Mehdi Haideri@HeyMehdiH·
Everyone’s building AI apps right now. 
If your SaaS is just an AI wrapper… 
You’re competing with the AI itself. The real edge? Workflow, trust, and distribution.
English
2
0
5
50
Mehdi Haideri
Mehdi Haideri@HeyMehdiH·
@chaosengineerr 100%. Metrics tell you what’s happening, but talking to users tells you why. That insight is priceless.
English
0
0
0
7
Wahab Khan
Wahab Khan@chaosengineerr·
@HeyMehdiH actual trust develops when you talk with users and that is the real edge right now
English
1
0
1
11
Mehdi Haideri
Mehdi Haideri@HeyMehdiH·
You don’t need to change the world. Solve one tiny problem. 
Launch in 2 weeks. 
People will thank you… with their wallets. Repeat. Iterate. Scale. That’s how billion-dollar products are born.
English
0
0
2
15
Mehdi Haideri
Mehdi Haideri@HeyMehdiH·
@cesaralvarezll Early milestones are everything. 100 users and $300 revenue proves product-market fit is alive.
English
0
0
0
9
César Álvarez
César Álvarez@cesaralvarezll·
3 days later, my iOS app is getting close to hitting its first big milestone: $100 MRR in the first month 🚀 - Currently at $71 MRR - Passed $300 in total revenue - 100+ new users - 24 active subscriptions Really happy with the progress so far
César Álvarez tweet media
César Álvarez@cesaralvarezll

My first iOS app has been live for 3 weeks. Here are the stats so far 🚀 - 1,000+ downloads - $217 in revenue - $56 MRR - 5 active trials for the annual plan I’m not sure if these are “good” numbers but I’m really happy with the start. Let’s keep building.

English
49
3
129
7.3K
Umair Shaikh
Umair Shaikh@1Umairshaikh·
I think I need to switch my agent ASAP!!!
Umair Shaikh tweet media
English
32
1
34
1.2K
Mehdi Haideri
Mehdi Haideri@HeyMehdiH·
@liamottley_ Exactly. It’s not about being “technical.” It’s about understanding how to turn AI into a system that actually runs your business.
English
0
0
0
6
Liam Ottley
Liam Ottley@liamottley_·
"I'm not technical enough for Claude Code" is the #1 excuse I hear from founders. I just spent 8 hrs in Cape Town proving 6 of them wrong. One sold his company for 8 figures. Another runs a $250K/month business. None had ever opened a terminal. But with a day of guidance, every single one walked out with a working AI Operating System: • An invoice checker catching errors before they cost money • Automated finance reporting that used to eat hours every week • A competitor analysis pipeline running on a schedule with zero input • A full content workflow from brief to published draft The future of business isn't hiring more people. It's founders who know how to build systems that run without them.
English
28
2
70
3.8K
Tobby_scraper
Tobby_scraper@Tobby_scraper·
Vibe coders are winning in these iOS niches: - AI Recipe Planners $65k MRR - Focus Timer Apps $80k MRR - Mood Trackers $50k MRR - Pet Health Loggers $55k MRR No big team needed. Just the right niche. Check Niches Hunter for more ideas!🔥
English
21
6
164
6.7K
Mehdi Haideri
Mehdi Haideri@HeyMehdiH·
@Hartdrawss $15K → $40K without a single new customer acquisition trick. That’s retention power.
English
0
0
0
6
Harshil Tomar
Harshil Tomar@Hartdrawss·
This Reddit user cut SaaS churn from 15% to 4.5% in 60 days. Here's the exact playbook: 1/ the problem > B2B SaaS at $15K MRR with 15% monthly churn > basically refilling a leaky bucket every single month > 200+ services listed, quality inconsistent, customers confused > support overwhelmed, lowest loyalty, worst customers 2/ what actually fixed it > killed 80% of the product catalog. analyzed which services drove 80% of revenue and axed everything else. fewer options, way better experience. churn dropped 4-5% right there. > built an automated 365-day guarantee system. detects delivery issues and compensates automatically. no tickets, no manual review. support load dropped 40%. churn fell another 3%. highest ROI thing they ever built. > raised prices 40% and repositioned. lost price-sensitive users, gained way better ones. net churn improved even though volume dipped short term. > added real-time order tracking and proactive delay notifications. customers stopped churning just because they didnt know what was happening. small engineering effort, massive trust payoff. > started weekly 15-min calls with churned and active users. not surveys. actual conversations. drove 60% of product decisions in the year that followed. 3/ the result > churn went from 15% to 4.5% in 2 months > MRR went from $15K to $40K in the year after > mostly because they stoped losing people the leaky bucket was never an acquisition problem. it was always a retention problem.
Harshil Tomar tweet media
English
9
4
45
4.3K
Joaki
Joaki@itsjoaki·
@HeyMehdiH i know, but in this case is totally fake
English
1
0
1
88
Mehdi Haideri
Mehdi Haideri@HeyMehdiH·
@benjaminprinter If your work can generate or protect $400K, your fee should feel cheap even if the hours were 40.
English
0
0
0
14
Mitch
Mitch@benjaminprinter·
Your price depends on what happens to money after your work is delivered Most consultants still build pricing around effort They calculate hours, assign a rate, and multiply the two A forty-hour project at $150 per hour becomes a $6,000 engagement That logic comes from employment An operator approaches the same situation differently The question shifts toward the financial impact created once the work exists inside the business If the system changes the company’s revenue trajectory by $400K per year, the price reflects that shift A $40K engagement aligns naturally with that outcome The deliverable stays identical The hours stay identical The anchor changes Pricing anchored to labor creates immediate friction The buyer starts breaking down inputs They evaluate how many hours are truly required, compare alternatives, and look for ways to reduce the scope The conversation revolves around cost control Pricing anchored to capital movement produces a different reaction The buyer evaluates the relationship between the outcome and the investment If $40K produces $400K, the conversation moves toward execution rather than negotiation The anchor determines how the price is perceived There are five ways your work affects capital inside an organization Every consulting offer fits into at least one of these categories Pricing should always reference the one with the highest financial weight The first is revenue expansion The work increases revenue by improving conversion, increasing deal size, shortening sales cycles, or opening new markets This lever gets used frequently, but it often lacks urgency Growth feels optional when the business already performs well The argument becomes stronger when the current trajectory looks weak compared to the market A company growing at 15% inside a market growing at 30% loses position every quarter That gap compounds over time The engagement becomes a way to recover lost ground rather than chase marginal growth The second is revenue protection The work reduces loss Churn decreases Retention improves Existing revenue stays inside the business This carries more weight than expansion because the loss already exists A company generating $10M with 15% churn loses $1.5M annually before growth even starts Reducing that loss creates immediate impact The price aligns with the revenue preserved The third is revenue stability The work makes revenue predictable Pipeline becomes consistent Forecasting improves Volatility decreases When revenue is unpredictable, the company can't hire with confidence So they either over-hire (burning margin) or under-hire (burning opportunity) They can't forecast inventory, capacity, or cash flow They make reactive decisions instead of strategic ones Banks and investors see volatile revenue and assign higher risk premiums The cost of capital goes up Credit terms get worse None of this shows up on a P&L line item called "instability cost" But it's there In every hiring mistake, every missed forecast, every interest rate premium, and every quarter spent reacting to revenue swings instead of building the business When you stabilize revenue, you fix the entire decision-making infrastructure of the company "Your revenue has fluctuated between $600K and $1.1M per month for the last 18 months. That variance is making it impossible to forecast, hire, or negotiate favorable credit terms. My engagement installs pipeline infrastructure that compresses that variance to $800K-$1M. When your CFO can predict next quarter within 10% accuracy instead of 40%, your cost of capital drops, your hiring efficiency improves, and your leadership starts managing growth" The fourth is operational efficiency Your work eliminates wasted time, redundant processes, misallocated resources, or inefficient workflows Every company above $5M has senior people doing $30/hour tasks The VP of Sales spending 10 hours/week updating a spreadsheet The operations director manually routing orders The CFO reconciling invoices by hand because nobody ever built the integration That VP's time is worth $300/hour He's spending 10 hours/week on $30/hour work That's $2,700/week in misallocated capital $140K/year And he's not doing the $300/hour work (closing deals, building partnerships, developing strategy) because the $30/hour work is eating his calendar So the real cost isn't just the $140K in wasted salary It's the $300/hour activities he's NOT doing If 10 hours of recovered senior time produces $500K in deals per year, the total cost of the drag is $640K "Your three senior people are spending a combined 30 hours per week on tasks that should be automated or delegated to a $50K/year coordinator. That's $400K/year in misallocated senior capacity plus the deal flow and strategic output they're not producing because their calendars are full of admin. My $25K engagement restructures your workflow and recovers 30 hours/week of senior time. The ROI isn't my fee versus the automation cost. It's my fee versus the $400K+ in trapped capacity that gets released" The fifth is risk reduction The work reduces exposure to financial, legal, or operational risk Regulatory penalties, compliance failures, and capital loss all fall into this category The scale of risk often exceeds the size of the engagement A company facing multi-million exposure treats the fee as protection rather than expense The price aligns with the magnitude of the risk removed Using this framework during a sales conversation requires a shift in sequence The discussion starts with a diagnostic Questions map how capital currently moves through the business Pipeline, conversion rates, deal sizes, churn, operational time allocation The numbers come from the client Once the data is clear, the financial impact becomes visible Missed deals, lost revenue, misallocated time, and churn combine into a measurable cost That number frames the entire conversation The engagement fee sits against that number The buyer compares the investment to the cost of maintaining the current situation The decision becomes obvious The work stays the same The price changes because the reference point changes The conversation moves from cost to capital And once that shift happens, the real risk inside the room is no longer the fee It is everything that continues to happen if nothing changes
English
4
0
31
964
Mehdi Haideri
Mehdi Haideri@HeyMehdiH·
@FedotOff90 She’s playing the long game. 1 hour a day for 2 years > “genius” ideas that never ship.
English
0
0
0
540
Alex Fedotoff
Alex Fedotoff@FedotOff90·
Met a woman at a Miami dinner last week. Former nurse. No business background. She's doing $3.2M/year selling one skincare product. Started 2 years ago with $8k saved. Her entire growth strategy: she spends 1 hour every morning studying competitor ads in the Meta library. Puts her face on ads. No agency. No media buyer. Just her, a Canva account, and a relentless system for stealing what's already working. Her ROAS is 2.8x after 2 years of consistency. I asked her what most people get wrong. She said: "They want to be creative. I just want to be right." The best ecom operators aren't the most talented. They're just don't overthink and print.
English
41
83
1.3K
117.8K
Yusuke
Yusuke@yusukelp·
I studied 4 landing pages making real MRR. 1.Stan $35.5k MRR “All in one creator store” 2. Adspirer $6.2k MRR “Run ads right from ChatGPT and Claude” 3. ClawHosters $3.9k MRR “Your own AI assistant without the headache” 4. CreatorsKit $1.1k MRR “Build your portfolio. Pitch brands. Get paid” Different markets. Different styles. But the same pattern: they tell you fast who it is for, what problem it solves, and why you should care now. Clear promise wins.
Yusuke tweet mediaYusuke tweet mediaYusuke tweet mediaYusuke tweet media
English
4
1
26
791
Mehdi Haideri
Mehdi Haideri@HeyMehdiH·
@jacobrodri_ Crazy numbers. The format + micro storytelling is addictive. Feels like the West hasn’t fully experimented with it yet.
English
0
0
0
62
Jacob Rodri
Jacob Rodri@jacobrodri_·
$19,300,000/month This app is printing money in Asia: - Short episode series (90s) - Vertical format - Ultra addictive stories - Unknown actors = lower costs - Hooks like “my boyfriend cheated on me with my sister” - Pay to unlock episodes who’s building this in USA & Europe?
Jacob Rodri tweet media
English
27
9
192
24.6K
Mehdi Haideri
Mehdi Haideri@HeyMehdiH·
@tibo_maker Honestly, this is how I see it too. AI is punishing bloat and rewarding speed.
English
0
0
0
4
Tibo
Tibo@tibo_maker·
unpopular take: the "SaaSpocalypse" is the best thing to happen to bootstrapped founders everyone panicking about AI killing SaaS is missing the point most companies getting destroyed are bloated enterprises with 1,000+ employees trying to extract as much $$ as they can from their customers meanwhile solo founders are shipping AI-native products from their couch and hitting $10k MRR in weeks SaaS isn't dying bad SaaS is dying AI-native SaaS is thriving 🙌
English
154
19
422
24.4K
Mehdi Haideri
Mehdi Haideri@HeyMehdiH·
@pierreeliottlal Interesting direction. The biggest unlock here is turning outbound from headcount-heavy into system-driven.
English
0
0
0
6
Pierre-Eliott Lallemant
Pierre-Eliott Lallemant@pierreeliottlal·
I built a 3-agent SDR team using Claude Opus 4.6. Research. Qualification. Closing. Most B2B teams still run outbound like it’s 2019. Manual research. Gut-feel qualification. Random demos. Meanwhile, AI agents: • Detect buying signals • Qualify leads in real time • Start & manage conversations • Book meetings automatically So I built 3 agents that run the entire SDR workflow. You give ICP + product. They do the rest. Want access? Connect with me Comment “AGENTS”
Pierre-Eliott Lallemant tweet media
English
85
2
60
5.7K
Mehdi Haideri
Mehdi Haideri@HeyMehdiH·
@hustle_fred Happy for him, but yeah, most people shouldn’t take that as the playbook.
English
0
0
1
24
Fred
Fred@hustle_fred·
this guy spent 4 years building his product finally launched and made $250k in one week happy for him, BUT you shouldn't do that what if you spend 4 years building and get 0 sales when launching?...💀 this is the likely scenario for most builders his case is an exception the faster you launch the better
Gracia@straceX

Indie dev Cakez77 started crying on stream. His game just made $250,000. 4 years working on it. Most people would’ve quit after year one. Sometimes the overnight success is just someone who refused to stop.

English
21
1
47
3.8K