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Lessons I Learned the Hard Way as a Young Indie Hacker

Last year, at 18, I set out to build my first real SaaS product. Before that, I had only made small side projects while learning to code.

I came up with an idea for a no-code AI app builder. It sounded exciting and ambitious, so I jumped straight into building. I didn't think much about who my target customers were. I didn’t talk to anyone. I just started coding in silence.

A few months in, I lost momentum. No one was using what I built. I had no audience. No feedback. No energy to keep pushing forward. Eventually, I gave up.

Looking back, here’s what I wish I knew before I started:

  • Marketing and validation are just as important as building. You need to know who you’re building for and what problem you’re solving.
  • Start small. Aim for a simple micro SaaS that solves one specific problem for a specific group of people.
  • You don’t need to learn everything at once. Only learn what you need to take the next step.
  • Communication matters more than I expected. I struggled with talking to users and making sales calls. That held me back.
  • If you're building B2B, don’t expect to sell to big companies right away. It’s tough without connections and experience.
  • A better path is targeting income-generating individuals like freelancers, content creators, and other indie hackers. They’re easier to reach and more likely to try new tools.

Now I’m taking a different approach. Talking to people early. Building in public. Keeping things simple and focused.

If you’re just getting started, I hope this saves you some time and frustration.

on July 25, 2025
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    If you’re on the same journey, let me know in the comment below ⬇️

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