The Only Thing That Survives (6 minute read)
A company raised $4M, shipped a beautiful product, got written up in TechCrunch, and died in eleven months. Three teams built the same thing within six weeks of launch and one of them was free. Only 3% of VC-backed software companies ever reach $100M in revenue. If a team with $50M cloned you tomorrow, what would they still not be able to replicate in three years? This post presents seven real sources of durability that have nothing to do with your tech stack, from proprietary data that compounds with every interaction to infrastructure trust that takes years to earn to physical atoms that no weekend prototype can shortcut.
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Services: The New Software (9 minute read)
The next $1 trillion company will be a software company masquerading as a services firm. Companies right now might spend $10,000 a year for software and $120,000 for a professional to complete the task. The next legendary company will just offer to complete the task. The frontier will shift as AI systems accumulate data about what good judgments look like in specific domains.
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Gen Z is Funding Gen Z. And It's Working (3 minute read)
A broader pattern is emerging where young builders are funding each other through microgrant funds and peer-run launchpads, with the key advantage being that check-writers are still close enough to the zero-to-one phase to fund based on current context, not faded memory. The earliest believers do not need to be the most established ones. Peer-to-peer early capital is quietly compounding into an alternative support infrastructure.
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The Brand Age (25 minute read)
Brands are the moat when differences between products disappear. Making the substantive differences between products is what the tech industry naturally tends to do. Good design tends to converge, but branding, by definition, has to be distinctive. Branding sells products, but the products still have to be good enough to maintain the brand's reputation.
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You Just Raised $5M to Build Someone Else's Moat (5 minute read)
Every week a founder pitches "we fine-tuned the best model on domain data" like that's a moat. It isn't. Every competitor has the same models at the same price per token. The real defensibility comes from one decision most teams skip - building agents that remember things between sessions. Most AI products forget everything after each conversation. The ones that retain what you changed, accepted, and rejected get meaningfully better the longer you use them. After two years of daily use, switching feels impossible - not because of a contract, but because a new product would have to relearn everything from scratch. The moat isn't the model. It's how much the system has learned about you over time.
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If You're Behind on AI, Put Your 10-20 Best Engineers in a Different Building. Today (6 minute read)
Taking your best engineers off your core product to build an AI agent is a risky move, but if you're behind on AI, it might be the only way to catch up. The incremental approach won't work. The companies that win in the next five years of B2B were the ones that made the bet on AI in 2025 and 2026. If your growth has stalled, win rates are dropping, or product feels stuck, the answer may be a focused team that wakes up every day thinking about nothing except the agent.
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Six Rules for Designing Company Goals (22 minute read)
Design company goals by focusing on clarity to ensure alignment and prioritization. Limit goals to three, assign a single owner, and prioritize one goal over others for effective decision-making. Clearly distinguish between goals and non-goals to maintain strategic focus and adjust strategies based on organizational learning and evolution.
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Spell (Tool)
Beautiful, sophisticated UI components designed for modern React and Tailwind CSS applications.
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The New Rules of Building (6 minute read)
There are now over 117,000 million-dollar one-person businesses in the US, up nearly 4x in a decade. Gamma went from 60,000 users and almost no runway to 70 million users and a $2.1B valuation - with 50 employees. The question "do I even need a technical co-founder?" used to sound naive. Now it might be the most important strategic question a founder can ask. Six moats that still hold when every competitor has access to the same APIs, and why your goal before raising a single dollar should be getting 10 people to pay you, not 10 people to say they like your idea.
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My chief of staff, Claude Code (9 minute read)
It's now possible to build a digital assistant that triages your inbox, organizes your day, and handles the operational overhead of your life, even if you aren't a programmer. This post details how Jim Prosser, a 43-year-old tech communications consultant who runs a solo practice, created such an agent over 36 hours with Claude Code. Prosser has no coding credentials, but he designed the system. People who learn how to automate and build systems like this now will have an enormous advantage in the future.
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