AI for Founders with Ryan Estes

Ship A Full App In 5 Minutes, Not 5 Weekends

57 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio Ship A Full App In 5 Minutes, Not 5 Weekends

Descripción

Every founder has a graveyard. Half-finished apps, abandoned prototypes, that "killer tool" you vibe-coded over a weekend and never touched again. Mariam Hakobyan, Co-Founder and CEO of Softr, thinks she knows exactly why those projects keep dying, and it is not your discipline. It is the chains. AI handed everyone a hammer and called them a carpenter, but it never removed the hard part. It just moved the complexity onto you: the authentication, the permissions, the security, the thousand boring edge cases that make a toy into a tool people can actually log into. Mariam is an engineer turned entrepreneur who led product and engineering teams of forty-plus people before walking away from a six-figure job to build something of her own. She and her husband Artur Mkrtchyan started Softr in 2019 with one stubborn belief: 80% of every business app is the same repetitive plumbing, and nobody should have to rebuild it from scratch ever again. They call it Lego for software. Connect your data, snap the blocks together, and a non-technical operator ships a full, secure, working app in about five minutes. The numbers tell a quiet, brutal story. A $2.2M seed they did not even plan to raise. A $13.5M Series A from FirstMark. Then a hard stop on fundraising, because the thing was already profitable. Today Softr runs eight-figure revenue with a lean team of fifty across fifteen countries, no traditional sales team, and growth that came almost entirely from a Product Hunt launch and word of mouth. Oh, and investors told a husband-and-wife founding team it would never work. Mariam's reply: they had a decade of conflict-resolution experience before they ever incorporated. This episode is for the founder who keeps starting and never shipping, the operator drowning in spreadsheets, and anyone trying to figure out when to reach for Claude Code and when to put the terminal down. https://www.softr.io/pricing https://www.linkedin.com/in/mariamhakobyan/ ⁠⁠https://www.linkedin.com/in/estesryan/⁠⁠ ⁠⁠https://aiforfounders.co⁠⁠ https://trynina.co/

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185 episodios

Portada del episodio Ship A Full App In 5 Minutes, Not 5 Weekends

Ship A Full App In 5 Minutes, Not 5 Weekends

Every founder has a graveyard. Half-finished apps, abandoned prototypes, that "killer tool" you vibe-coded over a weekend and never touched again. Mariam Hakobyan, Co-Founder and CEO of Softr, thinks she knows exactly why those projects keep dying, and it is not your discipline. It is the chains. AI handed everyone a hammer and called them a carpenter, but it never removed the hard part. It just moved the complexity onto you: the authentication, the permissions, the security, the thousand boring edge cases that make a toy into a tool people can actually log into. Mariam is an engineer turned entrepreneur who led product and engineering teams of forty-plus people before walking away from a six-figure job to build something of her own. She and her husband Artur Mkrtchyan started Softr in 2019 with one stubborn belief: 80% of every business app is the same repetitive plumbing, and nobody should have to rebuild it from scratch ever again. They call it Lego for software. Connect your data, snap the blocks together, and a non-technical operator ships a full, secure, working app in about five minutes. The numbers tell a quiet, brutal story. A $2.2M seed they did not even plan to raise. A $13.5M Series A from FirstMark. Then a hard stop on fundraising, because the thing was already profitable. Today Softr runs eight-figure revenue with a lean team of fifty across fifteen countries, no traditional sales team, and growth that came almost entirely from a Product Hunt launch and word of mouth. Oh, and investors told a husband-and-wife founding team it would never work. Mariam's reply: they had a decade of conflict-resolution experience before they ever incorporated. This episode is for the founder who keeps starting and never shipping, the operator drowning in spreadsheets, and anyone trying to figure out when to reach for Claude Code and when to put the terminal down. https://www.softr.io/pricing https://www.linkedin.com/in/mariamhakobyan/ ⁠⁠https://www.linkedin.com/in/estesryan/⁠⁠ ⁠⁠https://aiforfounders.co⁠⁠ https://trynina.co/

Ayer57 min
Portada del episodio "We Don't Use AI" Will Be the Flex of 2026

"We Don't Use AI" Will Be the Flex of 2026

Two fifteen-year-old rock climbing buddies from Long Island made a pact in a surf lineup: build one-of-a-kind experiences for causes they cared about. That idea died. So did the loyalty app before it, and the apparel company after it. What survived was the thing nobody planned, an agency born from following opportunity instead of forcing a vision. Justin Abrams and Mike Rispoli have been failing forward together for twenty years, and Cause of a Kind is the compounding result. The deal that let them quit their jobs was the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York, their first real foray into medical software and the moment Justin took out a half million dollar SBA loan and burned the boats. Today they build and modernize software for small and mid-sized businesses on a flat monthly model, no offshore handoffs, no surprise invoices. This conversation is a gut check for every founder currently drowning in shiny object syndrome. Mike has the scars of the Web3 era and sees the exact same pattern repeating with AI: companies slapping an "AI native" label on a context call to ChatGPT, then wondering why three competitors clone them in a month. His thesis is sharp and survivable. The magic is not AI. The magic is AI plus workflow plus deep domain knowledge, the combination that cannot be knocked off because you had to be the person on the inside to build it. Then there is the distribution story, which is the part founders will rewatch. Cause of a Kind went from roughly 7,000 to 160,000 plus YouTube subscribers in five months by doing one unglamorous thing relentlessly: they ship every single day. No filter, no precious production cycle, just two fast-talking Long Islanders who treat their business as a media house and treat publishing as the cheapest sales conversation on earth. https://www.causeofakind.com/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/cuzzinjustin/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/michael-rispoli-cto/ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCWAstEyCK6YsKVTTRsQr37w ⁠⁠https://www.linkedin.com/in/estesryan/⁠⁠ ⁠⁠https://aiforfounders.co⁠⁠ https://trynina.co/

30 de may de 202659 min
Portada del episodio The Physicist Building a Compiler for the Real World | Hugo Nordell, Encube

The Physicist Building a Compiler for the Real World | Hugo Nordell, Encube

Some of the smartest engineers alive are designing the physical world with software older than their interns. Brake discs, axles, medical devices, aircraft, all built on tools that can take twenty minutes just to open a file, and a knowledge base that walked out the door when the industry shipped its expertise overseas. Hugo Nordell saw this up close. Trained as a theoretical physicist, seasoned in Silicon Valley's drone and autonomous driving years, then a digital transformation executive at Sandvik and Aker, he kept watching brilliant hardware teams fight their own tooling on a daily basis while production costs quietly ballooned. So he built the thing he wished he had. Encube is a browser based, collaborative design platform that sits between your CAD system and your release management, then layers AI on top of a foundation almost nobody else is building: a deterministic engine that actually understands manufacturability. Think of it as a FigJam board on steroids, where complex CAD models and heavy engineering drawings become first class citizens, loading in two to three seconds on a run of the mill laptop with no expensive graphics card required. People thought he was cheating. He was not. The deeper insight is the one founders in every category should tattoo somewhere visible. Generative AI is rewriting software engineering because software has forty years of validation infrastructure: compilers, linters, unit tests, CI/CD, stack traces that let an agent self correct. Hardware has none of that. There is no compiler for atoms. So Encube is building one, on the GPU, blazingly fast, deterministic where it must be, with large language models bolted on only at the edges where stochastic answers are safe. Get that order right, and you could reimagine hardware design the way Lovable, Bolt, and Claude Code reimagined software. Get it wrong, and you ship slop into the one place slop kills people. https://www.getencube.com https://www.linkedin.com/in/hugonordell/ ⁠⁠https://www.linkedin.com/in/estesryan/⁠⁠ ⁠⁠https://aiforfounders.co⁠⁠ https://trynina.co/

29 de may de 20261 h 3 min
Portada del episodio Why Posting on LinkedIn Is Dead (And What Top Founders Do Instead)

Why Posting on LinkedIn Is Dead (And What Top Founders Do Instead)

That is the dirty secret of LinkedIn for most founders. You scroll, you cringe at the textbook-perfect ChatGPT posts, you maybe drop a like, and you log off feeling exactly as broke as when you opened the app. Ali Hafizji, founder and CEO of Wednesday Solutions and the builder behind Chime at getchime.co, has been quietly running a different playbook. He went from under 5,000 LinkedIn followers to 12,000 without leaning on a content engine. The trick was not posting more. It was commenting smarter, on the right posts, in front of the right tribe, every single day. In this episode, Ali breaks down why the comment section is the most underutilized lever in B2B SaaS, why your ICP does not want to be educated by you, and how he built an AI agent that does the soul-crushing work of finding the right LinkedIn conversations so you can show up, drop one human comment, and close the laptop in ten minutes. He also walks through the design partner pricing, the rare anti-predatory SaaS model where the price goes down as the user base grows, and the curation logic behind Chime's 40,000-influencer database. If you have ever felt invisible on LinkedIn while watching your competitors print pipeline, this one is for you. The Interest Graph Engagement Loop * Engage on posts that match your expertise. * Show up in the feed of your ICP automatically, because LinkedIn is an interest graph, not a follower graph. * Get DMs and conversations started by people who already trust your thinking. * Skip the cold outreach phase entirely. The Comment Quality Bar * No teaching, no textbook tone, no "ChatGPT wrote this for me" energy. * Lead with contrarian views framed without picking a fight. * Add wordplay, wit, or one personal anecdote. * Keep it to two or three lines. * Always ask the author a question. The Post-Comment DM Loop * DM the author of the post you commented on. * DM other people who engaged in the comments. * No agenda, just "coffee chat" energy. * Invite them to your newsletter once trust is built. * Send referrals their way and watch the favor return. The Anti-Predatory SaaS Pricing Model * Lock in $39/month forever for the first 25 design partners. * Add new data sources (Reddit, X) without raising the base price. * Pass cost savings down to customers as the user base grows, not up. https://getchime.co [https://getchime.co] https://aiforfounders.co [https://aiforfounders.co] https://linkedin.com/in/alihafizji/ [https://linkedin.com/in/alihafizji/] https://linkedin.com/in/estesryan/ [https://linkedin.com/in/estesryan/]

28 de may de 202651 min
Portada del episodio AI Just Closed 40% of Your Tickets Without You

AI Just Closed 40% of Your Tickets Without You

Your IT team is drowning. Every "how do I plug in this cable" Slack message you fire off is making it worse. And while everyone in 2026 is busy debating whether AI is coming for the C-suite, Tom Bachant has spent the last four years quietly automating the layer of work that actually keeps companies running. The help desk. The ticket queue. The Jira dashboard you've been ignoring for three weeks hoping it disappears. Tom is the co-founder and CEO of Unthread, an AI-powered helpdesk built natively into Slack and Microsoft Teams. He's also a two-time founder who sold his first company, Dashride, to Cruise in 2018, lived through the Cruise unraveling, then went back into the trenches with Y Combinator's Summer 2022 batch. His new company has raised $3.5M, landed Intuit, Lemonade, and Automattic as customers, and finished as a TechCrunch Disrupt 2025 Startup Battlefield Top 20 finalist. In this episode, Tom walks Ryan through the inception of Unthread, the YC playbook that got him to his first 10 customers without spending a dollar on ads, and the philosophical bet that code is now free so distribution is the only moat left. He also explains, with a straight face, why he runs abolishcars.org as a side project despite his first company being a ridesharing platform. The conversation kicks off with cars (Tom hates them, Ryan rides fixed gear, they both agree on flipping people off responsibly), and ends with downhill mountain biking in Crested Butte. In between, you get one of the cleanest tactical breakdowns of agentic service management you'll hear all year. https://unthread.io [https://unthread.io] https://aiforfounders.co [https://aiforfounders.co] https://abolishcars.org [https://abolishcars.org] https://www.linkedin.com/in/tombachant/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/tombachant/] https://inboxalchemy.co [https://inboxalchemy.co] ⁠⁠https://www.linkedin.com/in/estesryan/⁠⁠ https://trynina.co/

27 de may de 202632 min