It’s crazy how life works
A year ago, I graduated but what I actually learnt was nothing. However, I had a dream and I have been pursuing that to this day becoming an entrepreneur.
I started dropshipping providing no value but learning business.
Scaled multiple stores to 10k then transitioned to vibe coding. Built 4 MVPs in 3 months. 1 MVP got 245 visitors no users and the rest were made by my ADHD.
I have no regrets, I have learnt so much over this year and now it may be coming together.
Had calls with the Head of IT, at a large concierge company and now may be heading into a business partnership.
Also, I feel like I have a new mvp which can truly provide value to society(FreeFeed- social media accountability partner app). I am doing a marketing focused approach for this one which I learnt from my previous “failures”/lessons.
I am just saying this to everyone it is only over when you quit and I want to look back at this post and confirm that statement to myself as well. Come one guys bring your dreams into this earth, after all this life may be the only thing we have 💯
@Ninjasurprise_@Jayyanginspires I sort of postponed that project after joining this new startup unfortunately but I hope someone does bring innovation to the area.
Worst case I will come back!!
I lost 2 full days of progress to a silent startup killer.
It wasn't a bug or a server crash. It was waiting for "expert validation" on one part of my code before I did anything else.
This was the huge mistake:
My new rule: Momentum > Perfection.
Never let progress on one front be blocked by validation on another. Build in parallel. Assume things will change.
Has this trap ever caught you?
I lost 2 full days of progress to a silent startup killer.
It wasn't a bug or a server crash. It was waiting for "expert validation" on one part of my code before I did anything else.
This was the huge mistake:
The epiphany: I traded 48 hours of guaranteed momentum for the possibility of saving a few hours of rework.
Terrible trade. The cost of inaction is always higher.
Startup pace = zero chill.
LINQ waitlist launched this week and the community’s already live.
WhatsApp + Facebook = events, polls, insider builds.
London & Bangkok meetups next.
Beta invites soon.
We’re helping you find the right five people on purpose.
Jump in.
Startup pace = zero chill.
LINQ waitlist launched this week and the community’s already live.
WhatsApp + Facebook = events, polls, insider builds.
London & Bangkok meetups next.
Beta invites soon.
We’re helping you find the right five people on purpose.
Jump in.
Networking is broken.
Noisy feeds. Cold DMs. Random chance.
I’ve stepped in as CTO of LINQ → building a platform for real connections:
- coffee chats
- mentorship
- collaboration.
The way networking should work.
Networking is broken.
Noisy feeds. Cold DMs. Random chance.
I’ve stepped in as CTO of LINQ → building a platform for real connections:
- coffee chats
- mentorship
- collaboration.
The way networking should work.
Remember the first time you tried ChatGPT?
That same feeling just hit me again.
Tried Google Stitch → in 30 mins generated a polished app design for my new networking app LINQ.
This is going straight into Figma.
UI/UX workflows just changed forever.
Remember the first time you tried ChatGPT?
That same feeling just hit me again.
Tried Google Stitch → in 30 mins generated a polished app design for my new networking app LINQ.
This is going straight into Figma.
UI/UX workflows just changed forever.
Small increment growth is the only way to really win.
Last month, I was in my room building my first mobile app.
This month, I'm still in my room but as a CTO of a new startup.
Its small but its growth and I will keep improving like this for the next year.