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What happens when you are only one prompt away from creating

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almost anything you want online?

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What becomes real?

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Like right now, you have the ability with about one prompt or maybe a

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series of a few prompts to create.

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Any kind of website, a sales funnel, uh, mobile apps, uh, applications

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that you can use online that you might be paying hundreds of dollars

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for now you can create for yourself in minutes, and you could even turn

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this into a business in an afternoon.

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I mean, that's what we're talking about here.

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It's a wild reality that us as entrepreneurs have the

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ability to take advantage of.

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But we gotta focus on the principles.

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Like what are the things that you should do first and what are the

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things you should never automate?

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And a whole bunch of things in in the middle there.

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So Bill McIntosh is here.

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He is in the trenches, literally building this technology.

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So he is gonna break down what this concept of vibe coding is,

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or even vibe marketing, like this whole thing that now is a reality.

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We're gonna dive into it in this episode.

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Enjoy.

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bill, we are finally doing this on the podcast.

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It's been, um, I dunno, when did we meet?

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It had to have been almost a decade ago, I would say when we

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Yeah, it's actually more than a decade ago.

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I think it's, it's might be closer to like 15 years ago.

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Uh, yeah.

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I believe it.

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That's cool.

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Yeah, so, uh, I haven't talked about it a lot, at least not recently on the show,

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but I used to, I cut my teeth doing a lot of video sales letters for different

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people in marketing, you know, online marketing, some local businesses as well.

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And Bill.

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Yeah, you were one of the first clients I had and I Yeah.

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You were doing a product launch, I think is what it was, right?

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Contest burner.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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Contest burner.

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That goes back way back.

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But yeah, you, uh, boy, you helped me a lot in that launch,

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so that, that was awesome.

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Yeah.

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Those were wild times.

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I mean, yeah, I learned a lot.

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I know everybody was, it was just like the crazy launch era, right?

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Like

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well, well dude, I remember like, it's like two in the morning I'm on the phone

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with you and like we we're launching at 8:00 AM we gotta get this done and

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you're like grinding all the way through.

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Um, and then we get the video and boom, it's live just in time and yeah.

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And it's like, yeah, well thanks for trusting me and hanging out.

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And, uh, yeah, I mean, you've done some epic things throughout the

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years and uh, what's kind of cool is like, yeah, you said you've

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been kind of quiet lately, right?

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And so.

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But you're, you're building some really interesting stuff now with AI

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and some really timely things around vibe coding, which is a topic that

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we're starting to hear more about.

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So definitely want to debunk what that is in your perspective

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and what's possible for people.

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Sure, sure.

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Yeah, I, I mean, it's funny, vibe coating is like a dual-edged sword.

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There's some awesome things about that really empower entrepreneurs.

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And then there's some things that are, you know, that I think, uh, can

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steer people in the wrong way, but.

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Uh, interesting.

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Yeah.

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So let's, we'll definitely break that all down.

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Uh, but really what I wanna start back, or start with is your, your journey.

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Not all the way through, but really, I mean, you started in 99, 98, right?

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Um, online.

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Basically building businesses that way, doing marketing.

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Yeah, exactly.

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It's the very end of 97.

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Going into 98 is when I first jumped in online way.

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I remember it was gonna make me sound so old.

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But, uh, I remember America online when they first opened the

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gates from their walled garden to the general, the proper web.

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And that was when like the light bulb went on of, oh man, this

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is, this is such an opportunity.

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And I, I jumped in.

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how did you start, like what was that jump in moment like?

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Was there a product or, or something that stood out?

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Yeah.

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Well, for me, at the time I had a traditional, um, business.

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We had a traditional business publishing magazines and newspapers.

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And if you, if you remember like all the throwaway job magazines that would be

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in like the liquor stores and We spent a fortune on printing and distribution,

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um, of that magazine every single week.

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Um, and so in a funny way, I got into the internet to save money, right?

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So I, I kind of realized we could reach a much bigger and more qualified

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audience for a lot less money.

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So we built a site, the first site, I think the site cost me like

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$70,000 to build my first website.

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Wow,

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a bit later after getting that was kind of my, my start cutting my teeth on it.

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I started to realize, uh, in terms of reaching the, uh, such a huge audience,

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even in the early days back then, uh, it, yeah, it's, uh, it's amazing how easy it

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is to get in front of a lot of people.

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It's interesting.

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Yeah.

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You got online to save money and, and still to this day, I feel

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like, I mean, it's very scalable.

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Like, especially with AI now, there's a, it's almost like another

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wave of that happening, right?

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So,

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all this technology, they've been like, it's like a great equalizer.

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Even going all the way back to like 98, you know, it, it became so easy to

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start a business, um, as opposed to if you think about what goes into building

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a traditional, like offline, bricks and mortar, nothing but real world business.

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There is so much cost and expertise and time that goes into doing that.

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And so, you know, even, even like if you fast forward a bit to like

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things like WordPress, that started to make it so easy for anyone to just

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jump online and start a business.

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And now with ai it's, it's ridiculous how easy it is.

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So it's, it's such an amazing opportunity for entrepreneurs.

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It is.

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Well, what are some principles that you find yourself still going to, you know,

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from like starting back in 98, 9, 7 98, that you're still carrying to today?

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Uh, because, you know, with, with ai, I think a lot of us get.

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At least if you're newer, you kind of have a, it's a shiny object kind of

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moment in a way because there's so much that you can do and what's possible.

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But what do you feel like you live by principle wise, as a business

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owner, um, with all these changes?

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Well, I think you, you can never lose sight of what

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grounds the money making, right?

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So the reason you get paid money at the end of the day is by serving people.

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So exciting technology and AI and that bots and all the fun.

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It's fun to create, create that stuff, but you can never lose

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sight of the fact that the business is purely there to help others.

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And the better you are at doing that, the more money you make.

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And then kinda stemming from that is to not lose sight that it, there are humans

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and you have to think of human behavior, um, in, in all aspects of your business.

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And, and I think, um, yeah, people get all lost in the exciting, shiny, new

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stuff and, and they forget about that.

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Yeah, no, it's true because I, it, I don't know.

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What are your, what's your perspective on this?

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I feel like humans.

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Even more so because, you know, I do a lot of AI stuff with the, the cloning

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and, you know, the Delphi stuff.

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And, uh, I feel like more and more humans are just gonna get

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more important, you know, through, through this whole thing of ai.

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I think it's easy to lose sight of, you know, I could build this website, do

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all these cool things, but at the end of the day, you still gotta live by the

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rules of, Hey, humans gonna use this.

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This is just a tool that we have.

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Right?

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And it's made to enhance all of our lives in some way.

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Yeah, and I, I think too, just AI in general, there's so much confusion on

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what it, the general public doesn't even really understand what it is.

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Um, but yeah, I think it, it is, it is purely a. Uh, a creativity

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unlocker, I guess you'd say.

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People are afraid of it.

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Um, but truly.

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Yes, we're gonna go through disruption.

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There's gonna be a shift in the economy.

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there are gonna be changes to jobs and things like that, but I, I do not believe

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that we're gonna be in a situation where, you know, like half the planet's going

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to be unemployed, you know, our jobs will shift, and in fact, AI are gonna,

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I believe, make our jobs more enjoyable.

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I think that we'll be able to focus on the creative aspects and then the

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AI unleashes a lot of the busy work.

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We would typically have to do.

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So it's, it's more about empowering creation, not not hurting it.

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How do you Yeah, because I, I absolutely agree because there's

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no doubt gonna be a shift.

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I'm curious of like the timeline you have in mind, um, but because everybody

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has their own kind of timelines for all this stuff and like how it's gonna shift.

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But like, if you were to, I guess, talk with, you are entrepreneurs listening

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and watching, like how would you describe from your perspective, like

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the shift that's coming, maybe talk about the timeline and you know, maybe

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the disruptions and some opportunities.

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Well, I mean, I think it depends industry to industry.

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I think it, it, it depends a lot.

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Um, you know, we can zero in on, um, the, my big thing these days is the realm

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of AI assisted coding and, um, and, and have an AI that creates websites and,

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you know, all the various kinds of online assets, you know, so, you know, software,

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apps, web apps, websites, funnels.

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And at this point, AI has.

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Gotten really good at making those things.

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Um, that's an example of an industry that will be disrupted pretty quickly.

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Um, I mean, we're already seeing, you know, uh, I was reading an article,

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um, uh, talking about how in the big.

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Uh, giants like Facebook and, um, uh, inside, well, we'll call 'em

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Meta, I guess inside Meta, um, and uh, Google and the big places like

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that, 30 to 50% of their current, like new code written is written by ai,

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that's crazy.

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And it's early, like you said, like this whole vibe coding and this

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concept is, is pretty dang new.

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I mean, I don't know what the timeline is, but, um, vibe coding now is

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becoming more of a, a top of mind thing for people who at least are in ai.

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I think the next 12 months for vibe coating is gonna

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see, um, massive adoption.

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So it's a, it's a brand new industry, by the way.

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So maybe we should just dive in.

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Should, let's define a little

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bit, I think some people don't understand, you know, what vibe coating is.

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Should we dive into that?

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Let's do it.

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Yeah.

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Explain it from your perspective, what it is.

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Yeah.

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I'm not a fan of that as a label vibe coding 'cause it's sort of, it implies

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that you're, you're somewhat technical and you're creating code and you're

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sort of vibing with the AI and kind of this free spirited, free flowing.

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Like, oh, let's make this and let's make that.

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Um, so, um, I, I don't have a, a better name for it yet, but, but,

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um, there are an explosion of tools.

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It's a, it's like an entire industry started just it shit us barely a year old.

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It's, um, I think like it had its year birthday just within a couple of days ago.

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Uh, and already there's like three multi-billion dollar companies and,

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um, and at the end of the day it's AI that helps you write code and there are

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all kinds of different apps and tools.

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And things that you can do, um, to have AI write code, build websites, build

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web apps and stores and stuff like that.

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so it's using some of the big LLMs and I think it's cloud code, you know, and I

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believe is what the number one LLM that's kind of powering all this stuff, right.

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It pretty much, but you would be surprised the pace of innovation.

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There are a lot of models that are competing and in some areas

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even better than, um, say Claude has sonnet for example, that a, a

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lot of, uh, people use for coding.

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Um, even some of the Chinese models are now like writing really good code.

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that's the thing.

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Yeah.

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All this stuff is behind the scenes updating.

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Right.

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And then you have this interface and I guess, yeah,

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break down how it kinda works.

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'cause some people have probably seen some of these other tools out there.

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And

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maybe if you wanna name some of 'em too, because I'm kind of curious,

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like the valuations you already put at these guys, like within a year,

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Yeah, I mean there's this crazy story, um, about a company called Base 44.

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You know, they're, they're doing something very similar to what, what I'm

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doing and what, what some of the other vibe coding tools that are out there.

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And, um, six months, they were six months old.

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They had like three people on staff, um, and they sold for

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a hundred million dollars.

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Wix bought them for.

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Uh, works.

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Yeah, $80 million in cash.

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Um, 20 in some kind of earnout that isn't disclosed, but yeah, it's crazy.

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That is nuts.

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So that's great.

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And they're not the only one.

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And you know, you see these different, I mean, I get, I've seen a whole

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bunch of 'em pop up and I'm sure they have different use cases.

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They're focused on specific things.

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So I mean, the fact that you're in this, in the game now, you know, with

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your own tool and definitely tell us what it is, break it down and I

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guess why it's unique or like the positioning you're, you're doing with it.

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There's a bunch of these tools, and you'll see a lot of 'em will talk about that.

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They're the, um, that where anyone can build a web app and you just sit down

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and talk to the, the AI and it'll build you a web app or a website or you know,

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anything that you wanna deploy on the web.

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And there's been a huge rush of early adopters.

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And those are like the real, the tech savvy people.

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People that are, that either know a bit of programming or are technical

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enough to be able to work with the ai.

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'cause usually the AI will, it often, uh, you know, up until recently

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would run into problems and it would.

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Have errors in the code and there'd be problems deploying your code.

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And, uh, there's even some classic stories of, you know, co non-secure code

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that has caused all kinds of problems.

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Um, but all of the early adopters, um, and you know, that's already, we have,

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uh, one company, I think, uh, worth $2.8 billion, lovable, just crossed,

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uh, uh, I think $1.8 billion in value.

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So huge companies, and it's only the early adopters.

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Uh.

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Because the general public, I think is finding they use these tools

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and they're not as easy to use as, uh, necessarily advertised.

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That's kind of what I think an an average everyday entrepreneur

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runs into with these things.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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And that's kind of the unique problem I'm trying to solve.

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Um, you know, there's that phenomenon of a, a brand new company or a brand

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new industry and there's that, that thing of the, uh, as it increases,

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then you have to cross the chasm.

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Uh, are you familiar with that?

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I am.

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Yeah, but break it down.

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I, I think it's super timely.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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So in a lot of these industries, you get all the early adopters who jump

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in and they're willing to like jump through hoops and go through difficult

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experiences and they'll persist and you know, and that drives early growth.

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But then you hit a point where that market starts to become saturated

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and the product really has to evolve to serve the general public.

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and that's where we are right now.

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and, and that's the problem I'm trying to solve.

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I want to come in and, and make.

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AI assisted coding tools to truly live up to their potential where, um,

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someone with zero tech skills can.

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Chat with an AI and they don't have to worry about registering

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the domain name, setting up their hosting databases, backend code.

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There's all this stuff, um, that many of the other tools you have to

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be at least familiar with in order to, you know, get a final product.

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So what we're doing, a company called Buildy, so it's Buildy.ai,

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and, um, we're solving that so that.

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Anyone can have a chat with a, a bot and actually have a completely deployable

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ready to go website, sales funnel, shopping cart app, if you wanna build a

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complete software as a service business, like it'll do any of those things.

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So what, because I, I definitely have some experience with building some apps using

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tools like Bolt New and Lipid on Rept Lovable slightly as well, and few others.

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I think VO or V zero, however you say it, there's so many there.

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There's a lot out there, but you're absolutely right.

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You get to a point, like it starts off.

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You know, it's, it's, it's all prompt based,

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right?

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Like, so, um, and definitely if you have the coding skills, there's what, there's

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sometimes a, a coding version or, or a different view that you can go with.

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But after, like I would say a couple prompts, you quickly realize, you're

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like, oh my gosh, what am I looking at?

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Like, or like, how do I even preview this thing or test this?

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And, and yeah, like you said, there's databases to connect

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with and all that stuff.

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well many, those companies are doing amazing things and I would say, or

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especially like Rep has recently had some breakthroughs and some of

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the things that they've released if you're a bit technical, right.

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Um, and, um.

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So, but for someone, like you said, if you, if you don't have at least

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some basic understanding of all these different moving parts and then you have

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to help the AI debug the app, often, that'll be another thing where bugs

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will pop up and you gotta help the app figure out how to debug those things.

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That's probably the biggest one.

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Right?

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Like I've, I've heard that from other friends.

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They're like, oh my gosh, what do I do now?

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And, and it takes a lot of persistence and, um, either you just have to like,

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you know, keep going even though you have no idea what's happening and you're just

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sort of hoping you get through, or you, eventually you get frustrated and quit.

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And, um, I don't wanna, I'm not knocking any of the other companies, but if

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you go look at some of the reviews, that's what you find out is that.

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People that know some technology having success and being

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very excited about the tools.

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But for non-technical entrepreneurs, it's a mess.

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Like they're, it's just loaded with horror stories of people trying to build stuff.

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so break it down.

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I'm like, I'm super curious 'cause I really want to use, build these

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just selfishly 'cause I get so many app ideas and, and I know how,

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like, we're living in an era now.

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I feel like that if there's a tool or some software that you really want,

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maybe not like a full blown massive CRM with all the mass, you know, all these

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connections, but let's just call it like.

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Like, uh, OCRing a, a document or something, you know, um, you know,

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where you're taking like an image and you want to put text to it, and

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I know you can put that to like, chat gt, but like, just apps like that or

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an Chrome extension to do whatever.

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You could build those, you know, a mobile app.

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So, um, where was I getting at?

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I, I, I guess walk me through like how it's gonna be easier with your

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platform as opposed to some of these other ones that are out there

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I think right at the origin point is a difference because many of the

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other tools, I mean even the name, vibe, coding, they're written, their

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goal is to help you write code.

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So that's right from the start.

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They're built by programmers and they're built with the intention of writing code.

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That's how they started.

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For us, I'm an entrepreneur.

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I educate entrepreneurs.

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You know, I've taught hundreds of thousands of people to start

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and build their businesses.

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I know.

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How to launch and grow a business.

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And that's the principle which we're founded on, is we're gonna make tools or

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we are, we've made tools and are improving those tools, but the whole purpose of

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them is to get an entrepreneur to where they have launched their business.

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And, um, which is a kind of a different way of looking at it.

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It's, you know, it's not about writing code, it's about building

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and launching a business.

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And then there's a bunch of the stuff we're doing on the technology side.

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So, um, uh, I'm lucky enough to have a, a data scientist in the family,

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so it's a bit of a family affair.

Speaker:

I have one son who's a data scientist, another who's a,

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just brilliant at marketing.

Speaker:

So it's a, uh, the three of us teaming up is pretty awesome.

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Um, and so he has some really Ry.

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Solutions to some of those technical problems and how, whether it's debugging

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code before it ever is deployed so that it doesn't ever turn out to be a nasty,

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scary error message to the end user.

Speaker:

Um, to, um, we're using an ag agentic system where there are

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like multiple personas, kind of eat different separate ais with specific

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goals that all work on your behalf.

Speaker:

Like a, almost like a team, um.

Speaker:

And so, uh, we're architecting it to just make all that invisible.

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And all you get to do is tell them what you want.

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Yeah.

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So that's, that's all happening.

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But I think the piece I like the most is, well, the fact that you're

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like working with the family.

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That's something I wanna maybe talk about in a moment too, because

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that's super unique and really cool.

Speaker:

Uh, but like, starting with the end in mind, it sounds like that's the

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biggest thing and the fact that you want to launch a business ultimately

Speaker:

through this whole endeavor of vibe, coding or whatever coding it ends up.

Speaker:

Or maybe not even coding, you're just developing a, a solution, right?

Speaker:

Like it's a

Speaker:

product, it's a solution, it's a, it's a new business potentially.

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How do you recommend people start?

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Like how, how do you plan out maybe a new business that can be

Speaker:

created using this technology?

Speaker:

Well, I, I advise doing it based on research.

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So there's a whole process that I teach of going out online in,

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um, discussion groups, uh, Reddit.

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Uh, Facebook groups looking can pop into school, look in school groups, and even

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like old school forums going, you know, there's still a lot of forums out there

Speaker:

where people are having discussions.

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Um, and you can use Google to go like mine.

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Those, all those groups looking for problems that people in your,

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your niche or industry have.

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Um, and then you come up with solutions to those things.

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That's, that's probably the greatest way to do it.

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What are some other apps that you, maybe you or other people have used

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with Buildy that are kind of standout?

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Maybe use cases.

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I mean, there's all kinds, anything from like funny viral stuff, um, like, um.

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Uh, one of my sons built an app, uh, just the other day.

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Uh, you upload a baby picture of you and then a baby picture of your wife

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or girlfriend, and then it actually, it recreates like childhood memories

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of, and it puts the two of you together and all these like playing on the

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beach and in the playground and, yeah.

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Wow.

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Interesting.

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So, yeah, so it could be so nuanced that way.

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And I know, 'cause I was, when I was looking at your site and you

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mentioned it earlier, not only can you do that stuff, but you know, you

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can build full blown apps, websites, and sales funnels using this thing.

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So I'm, I'm just thinking, you know, as just the fact that

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you could build a funnel, you

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Well, and, and that's probably the, the, probably the most common,

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most, uh, powerful use of it in, in fact is not building apps.

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It's, I have an idea for my, a product I wanna sell and I can

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talk to the app and my site.

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I, I can have my domain registered, my site up shopping cart up

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and in business selling in like under an hour, the whole process.

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Walk me through that.

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'cause I feel like that's perking some ears up right now because it is, for me,

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it's like, okay, because, I mean, funnels inherently have always been a lot of work.

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You know, of course you have guys like, you know, ClickFunnels and

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other folks have done really awesome job at creating templates and

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flows that you can kind of model.

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But I mean, you don't even need to do that.

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It seems like you have this, you could start from a blank, maybe

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some idea, you know, maybe a sketch.

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I don't know how you start off with the funnel with your, with, uh, buildy,

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I mean, there's a couple ways to do it.

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Um, I, I'm a big believer in giving it some.

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Marketing and background data on who you're serving, why you're serving them,

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so it has an understanding of that.

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Um, and it can even write really good copy.

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Like I'm, I'm shocked.

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Um, I mean that's, that's an area that, that I'm, I'm pretty good at.

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And, and I, I'm shocked at the copy that it puts out when it's writing

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sales pages and stuff, but, so I just make sure I, I arm it with

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the knowledge of who is it for?

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Um, why do they, you know, what problems does it solve?

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Why are they gonna buy it?

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And then get really specific on it, on anything that you wanna

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make sure is in that sales page.

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So if there's a particular guarantee, tell it exactly what you want.

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'cause it will make stuff up.

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Uh, and it'll make up guarantees and all kinds of things.

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Um, so be specific.

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Um, and if you're, if you spend a lot of time writing sales copy or

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maybe you work with another tool to write sales copy, you can just

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dump your copy right into the bot.

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Say, here's the.

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Here are all my headlines and body copy that I wanna put on my page

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and then, you know, give it some general information if you have

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choices of colors or design choices.

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And then just set it loose and then it will build it.

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It's so cool.

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I want to dive in.

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I mean, I, I, I wish I did this beforehand, like actually built out

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funnels and all that stuff, but I know what I'll be doing later, uh, after,

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after a couple calls because yeah, I'm looking at this and I'm just imagining,

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I'm like, wow, you can literally.

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I guess what I would probably start, if I were to think this through,

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I would probably have it architect a structure for me of all the

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components I, I'm imagining out loud,

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Y Yeah.

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Yeah.

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You can talk with building to try to work through those details or

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you can, it's probably better to show up ready to, like if you, if

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you know what you're gonna sell, you know what you want in the funnel.

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Um.

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Yeah.

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You know, and then you just give it so those explicit instructions

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and then it will build it.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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Oh, this is cool.

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Okay.

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I mean, this, this opens up so many possibilities and like you said, uh,

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not only can you get up something running within an hour or so, but like,

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it could be, maybe that's the V one or MVP, it could be the full blown thing.

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Who knows?

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But the point is, you now can get live and get some real time feedback way

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faster than you ever could in the past.

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Yeah, and, and the way we're designing it.

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Is that, um, this gets your business launched and, but it can still run a very,

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very large business on our infrastructure.

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And if you get to the point where you're, you know, you're

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just absolutely crushing it.

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You got millions of visitors, you know, you're like, dude, you're, then what we

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can do is we can migrate your app onto its own dedicated infrastructure, um, and

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then even open it up for your coding team to d dive in and start getting hands on.

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Um.

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So that's sort of the expansion plan.

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Once, if you start getting really big, then we'll, we can migrate

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you into your own infrastructure.

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Very cool.

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So you have full control then?

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Yeah.

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Of everything you create, you get the code and all that stuff.

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You can migrate it out if you need to.

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Yeah, absolutely.

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Yeah.

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You have full access to the source code.

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Um, and I, I mean, we're getting that a little bit technical,

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so Yeah, you can connect it up.

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There are services that you can connect to Buildy, where

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it will store all of your code.

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Uh, called GitHub is, uh, for those, if those, someone doesn't know

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what that is, but, um, but you can connect it to your GitHub and then

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it puts a copy of all of your code.

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And then any change you make to the code is also deployed into

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your own personal GitHub, so you have got a copy of everything.

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And that's, are there any other, I'm thinking of any possible technical

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hurdles that we could talk through here just to kinda have the awareness, you

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know, give, give folks the awareness of, of what they might run into.

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So GitHub's a good one.

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'cause you see that used.

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All the time.

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Yeah.

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Are there other databases or other integrations that you think would be

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W

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what we try to do is we try to take care of everything you could

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possibly want all in one place.

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So you don't need any of those outside things, but you can bring outside tools.

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Um, they're called APIs.

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And so if there's a particular, let's say you wanna use a search

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tool to search Google, for example.

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you can go find an outside service that does that and bring

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the API to build and say, Hey.

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I want to use this to search Google and then it will do that.

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Um, and this is, um, you know, a big reason why right now we're also, we're

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raising a bunch of funds, so we're, we're about to start a round of fundraising.

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Um, because what I envision for building is that even.

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There'll be no need for any integrations.

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Like, we'll have everything under one roof.

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So if you want a voice app, we take care of the voice you want.

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Um, you wanna do searching or, uh, uh, being able to grab stuff off

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the web, we just do it for you.

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Um, so that you can, you could use AI to build fully AI powered apps.

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Um, you know, text messaging, voice, whatever it could be that you wanna build.

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I want build to just handle everything for you.

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Ooh, man.

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That's what I was gonna ask.

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Yeah.

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What's the future look like?

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And that's a pretty dang awesome, powerful, powerful hub.

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yeah.

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That's the, that's our next iteration where literally, you know, there'll be

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very rare use cases where you won't have the, the building won't be able to do

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what you want right out of the box, so.

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Mm-hmm.

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Where, uh, I'm curious, 'cause you mentioned fundraising.

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Yeah.

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So this is, this is kind of different than stuff you've, 'cause you

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know, we, we've been in the same kind of vein, digital marketing.

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Um.

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Coaching expert kind of stuff.

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And it's definitely a whole different world than, uh, fundraising,

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you know, and, and capital.

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'cause you know, I've, I've worked with some companies now and that, and I

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could see how things operate differently

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I've been a bootstrap entrepreneur all these years.

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Um, you know, only using my own capital and, um, you know, and,

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and basically building businesses on a micro budget and then scaling

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'em off their profit basically.

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Um, and, um, and right now.

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I need to move fast.

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And, um, so in order to move fast and to le to get enough

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leverage to grow fast enough, um, I'm bringing in outside capital.

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Yeah.

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So,

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Awesome.

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I wanna be the, one of the, uh, you know, looking at these others, um,

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we just launched, like, we literally just opened the doors to, uh, version

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one of Buildy, um, uh, just last week,

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Oh, was it last?

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I didn't realize it was that.

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we just did it.

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It's been, um, uh, it's been quite something.

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So, uh, we just launched version one.

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Um, and it is awesome, uh, but to make it like, have everything I want

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in it, that as we're talking about it definitely is, and I wanna do it fast.

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So takes a bit of capital.

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Absolutely.

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And I think it, it shows like when you know how to dial in a

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business, like you said, scaling with the profits of a company.

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It's what I've always done too.

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But then when you get some capital, as long as you can control the,

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the, the direction of the company and you know, you can, you can

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actually steer the ship still.

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I mean, you're gonna be dangerous,

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assuming we accomplished my mission and we crossed that chasm I was talking

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about where we really do, um, uh, um.

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Make this so that anyone, and that's my goal.

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Like someone who, maybe not even a business owner, a, a kid that could

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show up on Buildy and say, Hey, I want an app that helps me with my homework,

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and they could build it, you know?

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that's where we're going.

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Um, and I need to get there fast.

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And, uh, um, you know, like there's another company, uh,

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in the vibe coding space.

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Um, I think they're at about $2 million in annual recurring revenue.

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They just raised, I think, 11 million bucks.

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At a hundred million dollars valuation, which is nuts.

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And that's where, yeah, it's, it's such, and you're right, speed is, it's all

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about speed right now, of course, like we're in this very early stage of AI

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where most people don't understand it.

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They're for whatever reason, or they're maybe not in it every day,

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that's fine, but it will happen.

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You know, more people are, every day are coming, getting more privy to what AI

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can do, what it is, and, uh, you know.

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I feel like the market, you know, business owners want to be on the leading edge

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of things, so, which is why I wanted to chat with you about this topic

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because it is such a great opportunity.

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This vibe coding or whatever label it adopts, I think it will change too.

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I agree with you on that whole vibe coding label,

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Yeah, maybe we'll call it AI building.

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I don't know.

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I gotta, I gotta come up with some name for it.

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But, uh, besides.

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Yeah, because I mean, you even say on here, on, on the website, it says the

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fastest, fastest way to build software.

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So, you know, it's entrepreneurs I know are looking for speed,

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timeliness of the market.

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Um, it'd be kind of cool if there was like even a research

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thing, uh, built into it somehow.

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Um, just thinking out loud, just to help out, you know, just like,

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Hey, did you think of doing this?

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And then it's like a little, uh, like a little bubble, a light

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bulb or something in the corner.

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Well, it's funny you say that.

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My, my data scientist, uh, son ha, he, he and I were just talking last night and

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he's, um, he, he pitched me on idea of.

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Having an a, a research agent that will go search almost kind of like, um, how

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Deep Research works with, with chat GPT, but designed specifically to do

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research for what you're about to build.

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That's, uh, it's very in line.

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I think your son's brilliant.

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So yeah, you should do that.

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because I was, I was like, I'm not sure.

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I was like, ah, I don't know.

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Are people really gonna use that?

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And now hearing it from you.

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I, I, yeah, he'll be happy to hear.

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it at least.

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Yeah, I mean, I just think of, because it goes back to my previous question about

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how do you, how do you direct or advise people to start and you know, like some

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people just don't know where to start.

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I think that's the biggest thing.

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But then when you start to give 'em ideas and little breadcrumbs of what

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people might be looking for online in research groups, um, how to solve

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problems in their current business maybe, or their, or their clients.

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It just takes a few ideas.

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And then I think the light bulbs start turning on, on how AI or building in

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this case can be used and leveraged for like all sorts of things.

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Yeah, and one of the things that it's kind of, it's awesome, but a problem at the

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same time is that build builds everything.

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So.

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Right.

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You know, and that's not an easy marketing message to try to put out there.

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Right?

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But, but even like, let's say, I don't know, let's say you're

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hand making mugs at home, right?

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You're a crafty, um, housewife, uh, who just loves to do ceramics and make stuff.

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And if you wanna sell something on the internet, you know, I mean, I

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know Shopify has made it easy, but it's still a bit intimidating to get

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your stuff launched and out there.

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Um, but now you can just go to Buildy and say, Hey, here's a picture of my mug.

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Here's how much I wanna charge for it.

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Launch my website and it's done.

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And then, yeah, and that could be shared.

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However, you know, of course there's marketing and all that, but that's,

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I mean, the fact is now you have a destination, a place of your own that

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you can own, you know, your own, your own platform or even build your mug platform

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if you wanted to, to be, you know, the new version of, uh, Shopify in a way.

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There you go.

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There you go.

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There's all sorts of ways.

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You know, and I'm shocked it, I, I heard a stat, uh, last week that

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it was 20, a high, 20 something percent, may I say 27%, um, of

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businesses still don't have a website.

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I did not know that.

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That's nuts.

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Yeah,

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yeah.

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Of small businesses, I guess I should say.

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But yeah.

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So if anyone watching listening, just, just go to Buildy, make your website.

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At least, even if it's one pager, it'll be done.

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So that is my goal.

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I, I wanna empower millions of entrepreneurs to go from an idea in

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their mind to something deployed live and ready to go in, you know, in, in minutes.

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That, that's, that's my goal.

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What do you think will be achieved?

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People, people need to, I feel like with AI you need to have

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your hands on AI and experiment.

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So like what would you tell folks?

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Like, what's the aha moment or what's that outside of just, Hey, they're

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gonna, you're gonna be like, make a new piece of software or grow a business.

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But I feel like there's a deeper thing of that shifts in someone when they start

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to create something of their own with ai.

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you know, for me it's being able to take things that are complicated and difficult

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and challenging to do otherwise, and it just makes it easier, you know, like,

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um, that app I'm build, I'm building an app for my customers right now.

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Um, in fact, boy, I dunno if I, it's not done, so I dunno if I wanna show it, but,

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It's.

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it took a manual process, right?

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Uh, this manual process of going to Google.

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Um, and there's five specific search phrases.

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One to search Facebook groups, one to search Reddit.

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Forums and discussion groups and, uh, or, and school was one of them too.

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Um, and you have to do that by hand.

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So you search each one by hand, you scan the results.

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You look for unique problems that you might find people discussing

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that they are frustrated about, and you start to make a list.

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For years, I've taught this process manually.

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Um, and then it, uh, it is funny that I didn't even think of it.

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One of the customers said, well, why don't you build an app to do this?

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It's like, oh yeah, maybe I should.

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Um, so, uh, uh, but it takes something that would've been incredibly expensive

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to try to go hire a programmer.

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To do this.

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And you could imagine like if you rewind a year or two ago, if you were gonna

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hire a good programmer to go build a tool like this, it's gonna take months

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Tons of money.

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a lot of money.

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Yeah.

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And here in like an afternoon, I've took, taken that idea and, and it

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will be, I think I'm probably one prompt away from launching this tool.

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See, there's something you just said there.

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You're only one prompt away from Do.

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You're right.

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Like actually, and, and I think like to wrap a bow around, at least this concept

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is like, it's, it's the prompting.

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It's, it's your, you gotta get out there and just actually do it, you know?

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And then, and then you start to see what's possible, what comes to life of your ideas

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Well, and the beauty of this is you don't have to worry about making a

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mistake because let's say you sat down and you spent 10 minutes building an

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app, and then it doesn't come out right?

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You get you, you haven't lost anything but 10 minutes of time

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and you've learned in that process.

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So I think the important thing is, is just to start using it.

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Whether you use an app like mine or another.

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Um, it isn't like the old days, right.

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Have to spend months and like 10 or 20 grand to then find

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out my app sucks, you know?

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Right.

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You do a quick launch to maybe a beta group in an afternoon if you.

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yeah, exactly.

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For literally like a couple of dollars.

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Uh, you could, you now could deploy and test and find out, oh, maybe my

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idea wasn't so good, and then you move on to the next one, and you just keep

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going until you find that one that

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That's wild.

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It's crazy.

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It's it, it is a wild time to be alive right now, especially if you have a

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little bit of background in business, you know, and in marketing that helps.

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Of course, maybe you have an existing audience or platform

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for distribution, like.

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Then just start thinking of what's possible.

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Like you don't need a massive audience either.

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It's just you're, start with your network, start solving problems, right,

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and then put it out there, get feedback, and that that could become a business

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that could generate revenue, maybe recurring high ticket, look, whatever.

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I

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Well, I, I could give you a perfect example.

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So, um, he actually was a case study for me.

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We just did a three day challenge, um, a week or two ago, and he was a case study

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I that helped me out during the challenge.

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And his thing started out because his wife is a nurse and she was complaining

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to him about the, how, how much of a hassle it was studying, I guess.

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They do a lot of study.

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They have to do flashcards and, and, you know, in prepping for trying

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to pass the one big final test.

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Um, so he built her an app, it, the, the weekly, um, like study sessions.

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So she just uploads the PDF of what they're studying that week and it makes

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a whole quiz for her, a practice quiz for her to just go through and practice.

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And if, and if she gets an answer wrong, it tells her where

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in the materials to go look.

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Um.

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And, but that was just because he was trying to help his wife solve a

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problem, and then she told some of her friends and then all, now all of

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a sudden he's got users, you know?

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An unintended business popped up outta it, but, but it's a need.

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I mean, yeah, I mean, I know actually a few other companies that do test prep.

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It's a huge business just depending on the, the space you're in.

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So.

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Yeah, that's a perfect example because I, I think that's the thing, and maybe

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going, going outta here, you know, anyone watching, listening, like just go.

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I mean, maybe go to a chat GBT and just start throwing some ideas and say kind

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of roughly what you you want to do and the tech that you can use to build it

Speaker:

and have it maybe generate some ideas for you just to get the wheels spin in.

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That's usually where I start at least.

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And yeah, you never know.

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Start with your own problems.

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Start with your family's problems.

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You know, like you're gonna be able to get those rich details more so

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than if you're just guessing of someone else's problems out there.

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Yeah.

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And you know, and I'm always a fan of starting a business in, uh, an area

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that you at least are interested in.

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You know, if you're, um, I know some people will say, oh, start a business

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in something you don't care about.

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I don't believe that's good advice personally, but.

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Um, getting started is the easiest part.

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It's that journey that happens afterwards of problem solving and getting customers

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and persisting through all that.

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And if you don't, at least like the business that you have built

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and the customers that you serve, I don't think you'll succeed.

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I agree.

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And that's the, it sounds like some of your principles that you've carried

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over from, you know, from years now.

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It still applies here, and I agree with that because.

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Things are changing.

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You know?

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Of course more people will get privy on what to build and all these things,

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but yeah, when you solve something for yourself and something that you truly

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can go deep on, I think that's where now you got some longevity and you

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kind of can create a moat around what you're building as well and a community.

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Has been great, bill.

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So gimme a, gimme the scoop, exactly where they should go.

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Um, to sign up.

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Go use building.

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Yeah,

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Yeah, so just go to build ai.

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So it's just build with a y, build ai.

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Um, there'll be a chat box there, you chat with build, tell it what

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you want, um, and it will build it.

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That's cool.

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And also you're on YouTube and stuff.

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I know you're doing some cool stuff there.

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Oh, yeah, yeah.

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I, I have a weekly show on YouTube and, um, you know, we're putting out

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great content just for entrepreneurs.

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So if you want some advice on starting or growing a business

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online, especially using ai, then, um, yeah, check me out on YouTube.

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Awesome.

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Bill.

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Happy we did this, you know, over a decade of knowing each

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other and, and, uh, hanging out.

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So appreciate you man, and can't wait to jump into building myself too.

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Let's do this again.

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In, uh, not 12 years though.

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Yeah, yeah.

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Well go some capital, go have some fun.

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We'll build apps together and we'll talk about it.

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So

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Awesome.

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man.

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You too.

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See ya.