Yulo

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Yulo

Yulo

@yulo_tech

Building.

📍Free insights شامل ہوئے Ağustos 2019
464 فالونگ819 فالوورز
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Yulo
Yulo@yulo_tech·
After 9 months of discovering what "SaaS" means and having launched Vidalgo 7 months ago,   here are the 13 mistakes I will avoid in the future 👇   1/ Using NoCode: Probably one of my biggest regrets today is thinking that because I haven't been coding since birth, it would be impossible to learn while launching an app (even though it is probably the best thing to do). We ended up using Bubble and spent just as much time understanding the app as we would have learning a typical stack.   2/ We lost an enormous amount of time learning a pseudo programming language (Bubble), and because we didn’t "understand" what we were doing, we were literally unable to launch certain features that users requested. The ecosystem is also much more limited than coding, and backend functionalities offer very few possibilities, making you heavily dependent on a vast number of APIs (which destroys your margins and makes you extremely vulnerable to a complete app interruption).   3/ Another huge mistake that cost us dearly (literally) was spending an obscene amount of cash on fixed costs (API and tools). You regret it bitterly when it's time to give money to Mark for Meta Ads or just to pay some influencers.   4/ As I mentioned earlier, we had to use many APIs, especially for video generation since we couldn't use Remotion with Bubble (or at least had no idea how to integrate it). We had to significantly reduce our margin and were limited in video generation since we couldn't have pre-rendering like with Remotion and didn’t have pay-per-use but subscription-based services.   5/ Our execution was disastrous. This is probably what cost us the most out of everything. We spent an infinite amount of time deciding whether to do this or that. No prioritization of important tasks, constantly seeking perfection. And then suddenly, we wake up and realize that boom, almost 8 months have passed, and we're far from achieving what we set out to do. Just to tell you, we had the idea to launch Vidalgo in December 2023 and released a beta version around February, well before a huge number of other competitors arrived (who did very well, by the way). They all came well after us but surpassed us by moving extremely quickly while we were literally struggling. Well played to them!   6/ Not defining our ICP. A very classic mistake, but I guess everyone goes through it. It cost us an infinite amount of time concentrating our energy on things that simply did not target our actual user base. Never again will we make this mistake. It's simple yet saves a huge amount of time. You stop talking to everyone foolishly, thinking you can reach 8 billion humans.   7/ Wanting to "innovate" in terms of UI. That's over for us as well. We learned the hard way that we are not designers and that from now on, it will be very simple: UI kit + designs that have already proven themselves. That's it. Too much mental energy wasted unnecessarily on a blank Figma page.   8/ Speaking of Figma, one thing I won’t do again is jumping into creating the interface for real, thinking I have a "brilliant plan in my head," only to spend hours and hours modifying everything, hoping to stumble upon the perfect design. Always start with a Figma mockup in the future before beginning.   9/ NOT TALKING TO YOUR CUSTOMERS!!! You might think this is another silly mistake and that everyone keeps repeating it. And yes, you're right! We did it very early on but quickly lost the habit, and it showed in the product. We started making modifications and releasing features that were not at all relevant. Even a small message from time to time to some customers on Discord, for example, doesn't hurt. And given our execution problem, I might place this mistake as equally important. The worst part is that it seems so cliché, but I think by doing completely useless things, we forget to focus on the fundamental pillars.   10/ Not directly related to the product itself, but not having installed @rize_io and an extension to block X and YouTube until 5 pm also cost us a lot of time. (Rize is really amazing; I'm literally in love with the product.)   11/ Paying for AI tool directories. While it might be a good idea, for us, honestly, aside from wasting money, it didn't do anything significant. I think it mainly depends on the product in the end, but I don’t think it’s the most worthwhile investment at the beginning (especially for expensive paid directories).   12/ Underestimating the power of organic content (TikTok, Shorts, Reels...) was also a fatal mistake for a B2C product like ours. In fact, for a very long period, we did the exact opposite of what we should have done in marketing by focusing more on B2B channels instead of B2C. It’s very stupid, I know, but oh well 🤷‍♂️   13/ Creating a full AI product, especially for our very first SaaS, is clearly suicidal ahaha 😅. The number of APIs and agents we have to manage, models becoming temperamental overnight and needing to be changed quickly, the new image models with their very strange prompting rules that need to be understood, in short, it’s a nightmare to manage. Moreover, all these little APIs have a cost that significantly reduces your margin, especially at the beginning when you stay on some very expensive entry-level plans (Elevenlabs...). And the "random" results are also difficult to tame while doing everything possible to have something relatively stable and functional.   ----> All these cumulative mistakes made us miss an excellent opportunity and momentum that was right in front of our eyes.   But in the end, the most important and precious thing for us is all that we have learned during this journey. This product has mainly provided us with valuable resources that are now deeply ingrained in us and that we will be able to use for every new product. It has brought us much more than any training or other similar experiences. We learned everything from scratch about marketing and development thanks to this wonderful community, which is of inestimable value and constantly provides value daily. Thank you, indie hackers! 🤝
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Yulo
Yulo@yulo_tech·
I’m spending the week in Prague it’s such a beautiful and incredibly functional city
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Hubert Thieblot
Hubert Thieblot@hthieblot·
In 2026, I’m inviting 1,000 founders to San Francisco to start their companies. Are you in?
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Yulo
Yulo@yulo_tech·
@antonosika Don't know if it's good to dilute your positioning like this I will compare you now to Claude or ChatGPT and not to an AI app builder
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Anton Osika – eu/acc
Anton Osika – eu/acc@antonosika·
Introducing Lovable for more general tasks. Lovable has always been for building apps. Today it also becomes your data scientist, your business analyst, your deck builder, and your marketing assistant. This is a big step toward what Lovable is becoming: a general-purpose co-founder that can do anything. See examples below.
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Romain Huet
Romain Huet@romainhuet·
Happy 3rd birthday GPT-4! 🎂 Watching @gdb turn a hand-drawn sketch into a working website was the moment it really clicked for me. You could feel programming changing in real time. Three years later, we’re living in that future with Codex.
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Nico from Playkit 📲
Nico from Playkit 📲@Nick_5anchez·
pov you’re building a startup out of your San Diego garage
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Yulo
Yulo@yulo_tech·
@icanvardar Please algo recognize me 🙏
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Can Vardar
Can Vardar@icanvardar·
just keep posting until the algo recognizes you
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Yulo
Yulo@yulo_tech·
@SahilBloom And to buy my first bitcoin?
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Sahil Bloom
Sahil Bloom@SahilBloom·
Your entire life will change when you realize it’s never too late. You can wake up and choose to see things differently. You can completely reinvent your life. Too late is an internal fantasy, not an external reality. Every time you think it’s too late, it’s probably still early.
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🔥 Jakob Jelling
🔥 Jakob Jelling@jakobjelling·
This is bananas! 7,000 posts. I need to get a life.
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Nate Esparza
Nate Esparza@Nate_Esparza·
if you can reply to this you might have gotten paid for posting on X Congrats 🎊
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Yulo
Yulo@yulo_tech·
@Jashanx_gill Always UI, it motivates me to make it functional
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Jashan
Jashan@Jashanx_gill·
When building an app, what do you make first? The UI or the backend logic?
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Yulo
Yulo@yulo_tech·
@jackfriks ChatGpt subscription
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jack friks
jack friks@jackfriks·
what’s a material thing under $1000 you’ve bought that actually changed your life?
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pash
pash@pashmerepat·
Everyone talks about Codex for coding. I want to hear about the other stuff. If you're using it beyond writing code, what's your workflow?
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Ayush 🙏
Ayush 🙏@ayushtweetshere·
Best payment provider for SaaS with MoR? - Paddle - Dodo - Creem - Polar - LemonSqueezy Anything else?
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Marc Lou
Marc Lou@marclou·
TrustMRR now supports @PaddleHQ! That's the #6 payment provider. Which one should I do next?
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Yulo
Yulo@yulo_tech·
@melvynx The biggest problem is the speed It is so slowwwww
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Melvyn • Builder
Melvyn • Builder@melvynx·
Unpopular opinion : GPT 5.4 (and all GPT models) are slop model, unusable, boring and not even close to Opus
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Yulo
Yulo@yulo_tech·
@snowmaker Especially for type errors
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Jared Friedman
Jared Friedman@snowmaker·
I realized something else AI has changed about coding: you don't get stuck anymore. Programming used to be punctuated by episodes of extreme frustration, when a tricky bug ground things to a halt. That doesn't happen anymore.
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Yulo
Yulo@yulo_tech·
@melvynx transparent
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Bryan Johnson
Bryan Johnson@bryan_johnson·
Everything in society attacks sleep. It’s humanity's greatest risk because it strips clear thinking. Build your life around sleep. It’s worth it. Of all the longevity stuff I’ve done, I’m most proud of my learned ability to sleep. It represents overcoming the world's dysfunctions and achieving self mastery. Image below is last night’s perfect sleep: . asleep in two min . zero stress . no rumination . no awake . 4hr+ restorative sleep . 44 bpm . body cleaned out debris and rejuvenated Everything in society attacks sleep. Hustle culture wants you to believe if you’re sleeping more than 4 hours you’re not working hard enough. Social media wants you to feel that unless you’re performatively alerting the tribe to your existence, you don’t exist. Industrial food preys upon your late night stressed out vulnerability to glutton you with their slop. Lighting suppresses your melatonin. Screens seduce you to boil your nervous system alive. Societal angst from conflict, acrimony and meanness reverberates in your ruminations. Environmental toxins create bodily dysfunction. Stress keeps you tight as a knot. This is why people can’t sleep. And when people can’t sleep, emotional regulation and higher cognitive function shut down. The body can’t clear cellular debris. The body's ability to search and kill cancel cells is diminished. The immune system is suppressed.  The body and mind break down, rendering zombie status. I’ve built my life around sleep. There is no drug or therapy that is more potent for emotional stability, cognitive performance, happiness, and wisdom. What I eat, when I eat, when I exercise, my work schedule, how I socialize, and so forth. It’s all built around sleep. It’s worth it because nothing has the power to make life better and more rich than sleep. If you’re familiar with my work, you’ve heard me say these things hundreds of times. I’m going to say them again because people have told me that it took them hearing this 100 times before they gave it a try. Once they do, it’s a bit of an embarrassing feeling knowing that we’ve all been foolish, always knowing sleep is a good idea but then not doing it because of this or that reason. Do these things: Final meal 4 hours before bed. Screens off 60 min before bed. A 60 min wind down routine.  Walk, meditate, journal, bath, talk to a friend. Final caffeine around noon. Avoid blue lights in the evening. Use red and amber lights. Sunlight in eyes when waking. The marker for your success is your resting heart rate before bed. That which increases your heart rate before bed is bad for sleep (excluding sex) and that which lowers your heart rate is good for sleep. The list above includes things that lower your heart rate and calm your nervous system. Most importantly, it's an identity decision. Be someone who priorities sleep. People get trapped in the in-between state. They know they want it. They know it's good for them. But they're lured into the philosophies and norms of the early 21st century of sleep deprivation. Future generations will ponder
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Yulo
Yulo@yulo_tech·
@NaivaidyaY66600 But consumers buy a product quickly. No demo, no SOC2 or other boring things
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Navi
Navi@NaivaidyaY66600·
Stop building B2C. Start building B2B. Consumers love free tools. Businesses pay for solutions. It can be your best decision 🔥
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Yulo
Yulo@yulo_tech·
@HarryStebbings Why do VCs love overcomplicating everything? Can I just launch, enjoy it and hope that PMF will come one day?
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Harry Stebbings
Harry Stebbings@HarryStebbings·
One of the most concerning signs for me when investing in a founder is if they do not know the history of their space. You need to know who has tried this before? What approach did they take? Why did it not work? What did they do that they should not have done? What did they not do that they should have done? Bonus: Speak to the people and learn first hand from their experiences. The best founders are students of the failed history of their space.
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