Micro SaaS that PRINT $10k/month - Solo, No-code, AI | Beginner guide

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Dennis Babych
Learn how to build a micro SaaS that PRINT $10k/month, Solo, No-Code, AI, Beginners guide 👉 Build...
Video Transcript:
I made $10,000 in one month from scratch by  creating a micro SaaS, without any money, solo, and without writing a single line of code.  In this video, I want to share a step-by-step actionable plan with you on how you can find an  idea, how to do it solo, what no-code tools or what tech stack to use (and this is where all  the software developers will hate me), what AI tools will give you a real advantage and not just  a regular fluff, how to get your first 100 users without spending money, how to do a quick exit  and how to repeat this process again and again. Let's begin!
This is my bank account with my earnings, made by implementing my new micro SaaS  idea from scratch. I just wanna share this with you as proof that you can do the same. But before we start, I want to warn you that this video is not about how to become a millionaire  in 7 days by doing nothing.
Too many 20-year-old YouTubers claiming to be "millionaires" are  responsible for selling you air and fluff, with no real business experience. I will share today my  real experience, real results, and real struggles. I'm Dennis Babych, I'm Ukrainian, and I'm  the owner of several IT companies.
For the last 10 years, I've been involved in IT software  development, consultancy, and AI implementation. How did I find the idea?  How you can find the idea?
When I was involved in software development, most of my clients wanted Uber clones,  TikTok clones, Food Delivery clones, or they wanted to build a new groundbreaking  AI SaaS using just ChatGPT because it’s trendy. To be honest, the essence of business is always  to satisfy the client and do what they want. But what do you do when the client wants something  that is ****, something that no one needs?
That's when I realized that there are  thousands of companies like mine that fulfill any client's wish. The only  way to move forward is to understand what clients actually need, not  just what they say they need. I started reviewing all the software  products we made over the last 10 years to find the secret of why some businesses  became successful and some others failed.
I spoke with hundreds of my ex-clients  and collected the most important insight. Businesses that focused on solving  one problem quickly from day one, regardless of the technology, had average  chances of success. Businesses that aimed for fully finished products with 6-plus months  of development usually died.
Do you know which businesses survived and became successful? Ones that focused on quick launches, rapid idea testing, fast failures,  and repeating the process. The key here is the repetition of the process  and not betting everything on one idea.
This led me to an idea, why not provide  to my clients with a system where they can quickly launch their micro businesses and  test ideas within a single infrastructure, where 90% of code is already completed? So, they  just have to write one script and insert it into an already prepared system. That's how my idea was born.
So, I quickly took completed code  elements from different projects, created a micro SaaS wrapper, and started  selling it to all my new and old clients. So, what do you need to do to find your idea? There are two ways.
The first  is to understand what you are currently doing and turn that into a micro SaaS. That's what my friend Anton did when  he started selling his AI software developer services as a CTO as  a service with a subscription. The second way is to copy two, three, or four successful ideas from the  market and create a micro clone.
This is exactly what my clients Tim and Brian  did when they wanted to create a micro SaaS for accountants. They said they needed just one  micro feature to launch. After the launch, they asked for another micro feature, then  another, and so on.
In the end, I watched how my clients Tim & Brian made a successful  exit by selling their business to Happy Tax. So, here’s what you need to do: First, based on your regular working routine, you should come up with  three ideas for your field or your working niche. This way you will follow my path.
Second, follow the path of my clients: you need to copy 3 ideas from already existing businesses that  are successful and profitable. Where to find these ideas? It’s very simple, let's go to saashub.
com or saasworthy. com Look at what’s currently trending, pick three  SaaS ideas you like, and write them down. Next, go to review sites like G2, Capterra, Trustpilot,  and others.
Read all negative comments and these negative comments will be a real problems for your  micro SaaS. Do not reinvent the wheel. Just copy.
The third way, if you want to constantly receive  a stream of new ideas and stay on top of trends, you need to update your sources of information. So, subscribe to Product Hunt, TechCrunch,  Wellfound Insights, Y Combinator Blog, A16Z Blog, Indie Hackers and others. Over the next few  weeks, start consuming new information that you never consumed before to generate new  ideas and ideas combinations in your head.
A super-secret technique that has  always allowed me to quickly launch businesses and achieve success is  to fail the first time and make a bad product on purpose. Why? To quickly go  through the entire process from generating the idea, to programming the product,  marketing, and getting user feedback.
So, write in the comments three of the craziest ideas you’d like to fail with. For  the most interesting or funny ones, I will do a 30-minute one-to-one video call  to help you launch this micro SaaS in 7 days. Guys, I became so smart not within one day. 
I’ve made all the possible mistakes that all entrepreneurs and startup owners do. A few  years ago, I created a startup for DJI drones, spent a year and a half on development, got  investments, and in the end, the company went bankrupt. So, I know what to do and what not  to do to achieve results.
I learned my lessons. By the way, if you like the design and animations  in this video, you can follow the link in the description to get full access to the Figma  file, Adobe After Effects animation file, and 3-D animations. I spent five months working on this  design and animation with a team of eight people.
So, how do you create your micro SaaS using  no-code tools? Well, first you need to find video tutorials on YouTube about creating anything  with no-code tools. Then, spend from 3 to 6 months learning how to use these tools.
You’ll also  need to learn about databases, and understand how APIs work to integrate services like Stripe,  MailChimp, and many others. But most importantly, you’ll need to write clean code from scratch that  will handle your micro SaaS idea’s functionality. I want to show you the truth and not sweet lies  about no-code.
So, if you want a dose of reality, then like this video, hit the subscribe button,  and let's figure out how to code your micro SaaS. No-code is a good tool, but only for super  basic things like a landing page where you need to test something and the product doesn’t  even exist yet or functionality is super basic and easy to replicate. Here’s a cool example  of a team that launched on Product Hunt with just a simple waiting list.
Socap AI on Product Hunt But if you need a real micro SaaS,  you still have to write your core and main idea from scratch using code  if you’re a software developer, or you’ll have to hire someone on  UpWork if you don’t have tech skills. Want another secret? It doesn’t even  matter what tech stack your micro SaaS is built on.
Even if it’s Pascal, C++, and  jQuery. Software developers might cringe, but it’s the truth because your user doesn’t see  anything what is behind your website. They don’t know about the backend, and the term database  will sound like a rocket science to them.
Therefore, when choosing your no-code solution or  tech stack, keep in mind that the most important thing is to create a system that you can easily  use for each of your next new micro ideas. Do you know the difference between an  entrepreneur mindset and a software developer mindset? Software developers are  obsessed with the code and product quality, but if you are an entrepreneur you  must spend 90% of your time creating the landing page and marketing materials  and only 10% on coding your micro SaaS.
Your users may never see or test your software  product if your landing page lacks sufficient marketing hooks. All your efforts in writing  code could be wasted if the landing page is bad. For example, after creating more than 100  different SaaS products over the past 10 years, my team and I have analyzed and understood which blocks you need for quickly launching  your micro SaaS and testing your idea.
First, you need your landing page, preferably on  Next. js because it has built-in SEO capabilities that you can easily use. Instead of  creating your design from scratch, you should use a UI service like shadcn UI,  which allows you to simply write HTML code and use pre-made styles and animations.
You also need  basic registration for your users using NextAuth, an email service like Resend for sending  emails, a regular database like PostgreSQL, one-time payment and subscription  pre-built blocks via Stripe, a basic admin zone to manage your users, and an SEO  blog template for your lead generation process. This is the minimal must-have you need for  quickly launching your startup so you can focus on creating and building your micro feature that you  will integrate into this micro SaaS boilerplate. I understand that many beginners or people who  don’t have the time or resources to create all this are watching this video, so you just need to  spend more time doing this.
If you have minimal resources, I have good news for you—we've  already created this boilerplate for you. You can use all these pre-built blocks  and modules to build your micro SaaS within one week. This is a minimal set of  features that you need to ship your idea fast to the market and repeat the process  again and again.
No need for investments, no need to spend a few months  creating a code from scratch, no need to pay a monthly fee just a one-time  payment, and all intellectual property is yours. Here are some businesses my clients have  already launched using this boilerplate. So, you can either write  such a boilerplate yourself, or you can click the link in the  description to get the ready-made blocks and modules that you can use  today to launch your micro SaaS.
Look, I don’t want to pressure or manipulate  you by saying that if you don’t start making a micro SaaS, you’ll miss the opportunity  of a lifetime. That’s not true. I just want to show you startups that users have been  selling via Acquire.
com over the past six months. As you can see, most of these businesses  have a revenue of $20,000 to $150,000 per year. And people are buying these startups.
Achieving  these numbers is actually very easy and simple by launching your product on Product Hunt and  doing a few partnership promotions. Honestly, I’m lazy and I love finding opportunities  where you can do something quickly and get maximum results in a couple of weeks.  Whether you use this or not is up to you.
Why should you create an  MVP with just one feature? Consider this: when my clients were starting their  startups, they faced the "200 kg barbell" problem. The essence is that when you go to the gym,  you don’t start by lifting a 200 kg barbell on the first day, right?
But in business, it’s the  opposite. People think that hiring developers, finding a partner, writing code, overseeing  developers, preparing marketing materials, forming an LLC, and launching the product in the  market and raising funds is all easy and simple, and that they will have enough resources, money, and motivation to handle all this  for a couple of years. In reality, it doesn't work like that.
That's why you  need to do something very small and simple. By the way, do you know where to  find an endless source of motivation? It’s when you quickly create your micro  SaaS, launch it, and get the first money in your bank account.
Then you’ll have the desire,  motivation, and most importantly, the resources to improve your product, enhance conversions,  add new features, and so on. Believe me. Do you know the perfect example of a fast MVP  launch?
It's Amazon Go, where their video cameras and genius AI figured out if you picked up a  product, stole it, and so on. Well, that was an MVP where Amazon just hired people from India  to watch the customers through video cameras. Using this methodology, we created a  micro SaaS for our client Ran.
Initially, we created a simple landing page about algo  trading, and his first idea didn’t receive positive feedback from users. Then we  refined the idea and added one micro feature to his micro SaaS, and within a few  months, Ran managed to raise $200,000 easily. Part Three: How to Use AI Advantage & How  it can help you generate new cool ideas?
Please remember, if it’s cheaper to  hire someone from India for $3 an hour, then you don’t need AI at all. AI is just a tool that allows you to solve old  and existing problems for your users in a new, faster, and better way. But to understand  which problems it is suitable for AI, you need to understand how AI works  and what its capabilities are.
First, there are different LLMs (Large Language  Models). There are many of them, and they vary. The most famous is ChatGPT from OpenAI, Llama  from Facebook, Gemini from Google, and others.
You should also pay attention to tools  like LangChain, which allow you to create a vector database for your knowledge base  and integrate any LLM to create your chatbot. It sounds scary, but to simplify, it's just a  system that allows your chatbot to have knowledge about something from your database and answer  user questions based on that knowledge base. Next, we have AI agents.
These are bots  that act as programmers, testers, marketers, and so on. Usually, you create the description  of your agent using regular prompts and define its reactions to events. The more agents you have,  the better the output quality.
They should check each other and have a limited action cycle.  They are needed when you need to significantly improve the output, especially when a regular  ChatGPT gives weak results or hallucinations. AI memory allows your AI or AI agents to have  memory for ongoing communication with your users.
It’s great when your bot knows what you and your  users like because it has saved your preferences in its database and now it can offer better  solutions knowing what you like and what you hate. We also have Groq, which allows you to process  your AI requests very quickly. Typically, Groq's infrastructure is used for AI cold calls  because Groq can reduce latency to almost zero, giving the impression that  you're talking to a real person.
And of course, there are many different  3rd party services like 11labs for creating different voices for cold calls, podcasts, or just  voice-overs, MidJourney for generating images, music creation services, and others. Once you understand your options, you can combine them to create solutions  for your users. Again, it’s best to create solutions for businesses because they are  willing to pay more than regular users.
Here’s another tip: first, use ready-made  blocks, modules, or services that allow you to create your AI solution solo with no  code, like RelevanceAI. Build your solution, use MicroSaaSFast for a quick launch, test  it in the market, and if users like it and are willing to pay. I will repeat, if they  are willing to pay then you can create your solution 2.
0 with custom blocks, modules,  registered intellectual property, and so on. Also, if you are interested in delving  deeper into the world of startups, AI, and SaaS businesses, and want  to connect with business-minded founders and entrepreneurs where I share  tons of insights and host live chats, then click the link in the video description  and join me on my Telegram or Twitter right now. Part Four: How to Get Your  First 100 Users for Free Let's start with the easiest  method which is your network.
When you launch your micro SaaS, you should spread  the word among your acquaintances [а квейнтин сес , uh·kwayn·tin·sz], friends, or colleagues.  WhatsApp, Emails, Twitter, and LinkedIn. The advanced level is to write a  message to small influencers give them free access to your product and ask them  to mention it on their Twitter or LinkedIn.
Be direct and go the point—skip the greetings  and pleasantries [Плезен тріес]. Don’t forget to follow up a few times. By the  way, it works best if you can get the person on a video call under the argument  of expanding your network.
Use this life hack. For example, I wrote an email to one  of my old clients, and she immediately recommended my service to her ex-colleague,  who then purchased my micro SaaS wrapper. The second method is by writing articles for your  blog.
Remember, we are not reinventing the wheel, especially at the idea level. The best method  for that is to write "alternative" articles. For example, if we look at alternatives  to Intercom, we’ll see many articles that immediately provide a list.
These users already  know what they are looking for, and they are the ones who are ready to pay. How do you write such  an article? Just copy the existing article, add your keywords, add the name of your product, and  ask ChatGPT to rewrite then add it to your blog.
Moving on. The next method is Product Hunt. So, what do you need to do?
First, create  an account and add a profile description. Start doing this now because if  your account is empty or new, you won’t be able to post about  your startup for the first 7 days. Next, create a description of your product. 
This is probably the most crucial part and a skill you should train. For the first time, you  can just copy what competitors are doing, and for the second time, you can improve it. Remember, the  first time we create something that no one needs?
The most important part is this short text. If  this text doesn’t grab the user’s attention, all the other work is useless.  The goal of this block is to motivate your users to click and  open the detailed information.
In the detailed information, you  can reveal more specific details, but the most important thing is the images.  They must be attractive and sell your idea, so the user wants to click  through and watch your video. Finally, add a long first comment containing  a mini-story about your struggles and eventual success.
But more importantly, list your  customers' PAIN POINTS and describe the SOLUTION they will get by using your micro SaaS. Next, plan your launch date. The rule is  simple: your launch will be visible for one day, according to the Pacific Time  Zone.
Remember that weekends have less traffic and competition, while weekdays  have more traffic and more competition. Also, remember that launching a product  on Product Hunt is a system. To get good visibility and results, you need to  find from 10 to 50 people in advance, negotiate with them, and ensure they have good  Product Hunt accounts that can upvote your product and give it a basic boost.
Remember,  empty or new accounts of your friends won’t help and will only decrease your positions on  Product Hunt. Their algorithm can catch that. The fourth method is the Hacker News forum. 
It's a fantastic service that can generate a lot of traffic if you get a chance to become  visible on the first page. It's super simple: you go to the Show section, read the rules,  see how other users launch their startups, and do the same. The main  thing to know here is that the audience is primarily software  developers and tech enthusiasts.
There are two key points: First. Your headline should be simple and clear,  describing the problem and solution. Avoid using silly words like groundbreaking, innovative, etc. 
The headline should be relevant and to the point. Second. Comments are very important.
Read what  users write and respond to them because their comments can provide valuable insights on how  to improve your product or what to focus on. The comments will be 90% negative, but they  will help you get a better understanding of your app. Hacker News is a place where you can  get a lot of criticism, new ideas, and traffic.
The formula is: I made [product] to [outcome]. And don't forget to share your story in the  first comment, explaining why you did all this. And the fifth method is partnerships. 
For example, your service is an Intercom clone with WhatsApp integration, and your  partner is a business that offers deep user analytics for websites. Your task is to do  cross-promotion: you advertise their service, and they advertise yours in their email  lists, Twitter, LinkedIn, and so on. The best part about your micro SaaS is that it  takes less than a week to write the code and launch your software.
After that, this business  will run on autopilot and generate profit for you. Once you have a stable profit for a few months, you can start looking for  buyers to sell your business. It’s important to know that the multiplier  for a typical SaaS is from 5 to 10 times, but for a micro SaaS, it’s from 1.
5 to 2 times.  So, if your annual revenue is $120,000. Once again, revenue, not profit then the value of your  micro SaaS business will be $180,000 to $240,000.
Remember that you are selling intellectual  property, and you don’t always need a new company incorporate for this. Just  create a separate Stripe account. There are three methods for your exit.
The first  is networking with people you know personally or within your community. The second method is  to list your business on Acquire. com and wait for offers from potential buyers.
The third  method is to proactively search for buyers. An example is Drpbox, which has acquired many  companies over the last 10 years. Find companies that are larger than yours but not too big,  in related niches, and start communicating.
Look guys, the most important thing is to create a  system where you can quickly build your micro SaaS businesses. A system where you can test your  new ideas quickly and almost without money. Once you create such a system, you can reuse  it dozens of times.
Each next time will only require you to write a script for your micro idea  and insert it into the already working system. Success is math and simply a  matter of the number of tries. Me, my clients, successful YouTubers, and  you, we are all ordinary people who have just made more mistakes than regular people. 
So get off your couch and start creating your micro SaaS now. The cost of failure is  just a week spent creating everything, but the cost of regret when someone  else does it and you don’t is too high. Your idea is needed by your users, your  micro SaaS is needed by the market, and even if no one believes in you, I do!
My name is Dennis Babych. Remember to  like this video, subscribe to the channel, and use MicroSaaSFast to quickly  create your startup today. See you!
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