Building my first SaaS with no funding.
ShipOS - write once, schedule everywhere.
Documenting every win and every mistake
publicly.
If it works I'll show you how.
If it fails I'll show you that too.
🔗 waitlist link coming soon
These 3 tips are for you if you’re looking to grow:
1/3
The creators who win long term
are not the most talented.
They are the most honest.
Talent gets attention.
Honesty builds trust.
Trust builds everything else.
2/3
Nobody shares content that teaches them.
They share content that makes them
look smart for sharing it.
Write to make your reader the hero.
Not yourself.
3/3
Growth tip nobody talks about:
Study your worst performing posts
harder than your best ones.
Your failures teach more
than your wins ever will.
Hey @X, share these tips with founders who are craving growth.
Here are 5 growth tips that can make a real difference:
1/5
The algorithm does not reward the best content.
It rewards the content people
spend the most time on.
Write slower reads.
Not faster ones.
2/5
Your first line is not a hook.
It is a decision your reader makes
in under two seconds.
Write it last.
After you know what you are actually saying.
3/5
Most people grow an audience.
The best people grow a reputation.
Audiences follow content.
Reputations follow people.
Build the reputation first.
4/5
The post you are afraid to publish
is usually the one worth publishing most.
Fear is a signal.
Not a stop sign.
5/5
Consistency is not posting every day.
Consistency is never making your audience
wonder if you still exist.
Show up before they forget you.
@TheoNahman99681 I’ll be building free tool that does this automation soon, just upload the backgrounds, contents and you’re good to generate 100ths of posts
I’m confidently building ShipOS, and I’m taking inspiration from @jackfriks.
One step at a time.
I don’t have the followers.
I don’t have the growth.
And I’m not great at marketing yet.
But I’ve been learning a lot about marketing and sharing the journey as I build.
Slowly, but surely.
The ultimate price for growth is discomfort.
You must step outside your comfort zone to see real change.
Embrace the challenges, learn from them, and keep pushing forward.
That’s where true growth happens.
Many SaaS founders give up because they underestimate the time it takes to build a solid product.
They often get discouraged by slow growth or too many obstacles.
It’s easy to lose sight of the long game when immediate results don’t show up.
Halfway through building ShipOS.
What I thought would take a month
is taking longer.
What I thought was complex
turned out to be simple.
Building humbles you in the best way.
Building as a solo developer means you wear many hats.
You code, market, and manage your time all at once.
Focus on one thing at a time to avoid burnout.
Celebrate small wins, and keep moving forward.
Every line of code counts toward your vision.
I fixed the workspace switching logic, and it took longer than I thought.
But I learned that determination makes a difference.
Challenges will come, but if you stay focused and push through, opportunities will show up.
What recent challenge has tested your grit?
SaaS often fails because companies forget to listen to their users.
Building a product without feedback is like driving blindfolded.
You might think you're on the right path, but you're likely missing the mark.
Always prioritize user needs over your assumptions.
I made a decision early in building ShipOS
that changed everything.
I decided to build with the smallest
possible stack that could do the job.
Most first-time SaaS builders
overcomplicate the architecture.
They add services they do not need yet.