Vibe Coder’s Manual

Vibe Coders Manual

Building is solved. You can spin up a Next.js app with Cursor and Claude in a single weekend. But turning a vibe-coded app into actual monthly recurring revenue (MRR) is brutally hard. This show is for indie hackers, solopreneurs, and semi-technical founders who want to escape the vibe revenue trap. We skip the launch day dopamine hits and the generic startup advice. Instead, we break down the exact practitioner receipts you need: automated validation workflows, token-aware pricing models, and the exact tech stacks (like Supabase and MCP) that stop your AI from hallucinating in production. No hype. Just the hard math and specific configurations required to build a sustainable SaaS in the era of vibe coding.

Season 1

  1. SaaS Distribution for Solo Founders: Reddit, Product Hunt, GEO and Cold Outbound

    EPISODE 7

    SaaS Distribution for Solo Founders: Reddit, Product Hunt, GEO and Cold Outbound

    SaaS distribution in 2026 is a technical problem, not a marketing problem - and this episode is the execution manual, not the philosophy. It opens with the tool → smart recommendations → AI agent sequence that every breakout SaaS follows (and why skipping straight to agents is commercially suicidal). Then: Generative Engine Optimization (GEO) — why AI crawlers treat your landing page like a JSON payload, why semantic HTML and JSON-LD schema markup are now mandatory, and the Princeton study showing LLMs cite earned media over owned content. The Hacker News architecture: 69 points triggers a 10-hour spike of ~60,000 visitors, and post-surge up to 50% of sustained referral traffic now comes from ChatGPT at 2x the conversion rate of Google. The 14-day Reddit ramp protocol with the 3:1 non-promotional ratio rule and subreddit-specific tactics for r/SaaS, r/startups, and r/marketing. The 2026 Product Hunt algorithm changes (upvote rings now actively penalize you), the Tuesday vs Monday launch day debate with data for both sides, and the 8–15% visitor-to-signup benchmark that tells you if your landing page is broken. The G2 monopoly after acquiring Capterra — G2 now holds 93% of bottom-of-funnel AI citations for software reviews. Intent-based cold outbound with Clay (trigger: Series B announcement, new CCO hire, technographic competitor data). And the 60-day launch calendar with the month-one benchmark: 847 median users, $127 CAC, 8.2 months to break even.

    39 min
  2. AI Customer Support at Scale: Tiered Architecture for Solo Founders

    EPISODE 8

    AI Customer Support at Scale: Tiered Architecture for Solo Founders

    AI customer support isn't a tool decision — it's an architectural decision. This episode starts with the support volume paradox (support doesn't scale linearly past 1,000 users, it explodes logarithmically due to combinatorial environment variance), then dismantles the Human Touch Theater Trap: founders spending 25–55% of their week manually answering tickets at an industry average cost of $19 per ticket, while a poor support interaction makes users 50% more likely to churn within 6 months. The full four-tier architecture with exact cost-per-resolution math: Tier 0 self-service docs at under $0.01, Tier 1 agentic AI at $0.50–$1.50 resolving 40–92% of tickets, Tier 2 contractor layer at $15–$25, Tier 3 founder escalation at $150+. Then the head-to-head cost math: Intercom Fin at $534/month for 500 tickets vs custom Supabase + Claude Haiku build at $26.50/month — scaling to $4,989 vs $40 at 5,000 tickets, with break-even on your 20 engineering hours at 8 months. Deep RAG engineering: LlamaParse vision-based ingestion for complex PDFs, fixed-size vs semantic vs late chunking (semantic improves retrieval recall by 9%), AWS flat-level syntax rules for machine-readable docs, and cosine similarity threshold tuning. Thomas Wiggled's Agent Tiny triage system: Claude Haiku classification at $0.01–$0.05 per ticket with forced JSON output (priority, category, reasoning). The contextual handoff protocol that eliminates "explain your problem again." And the Sunday midnight cron workflow that turns 500 resolved tickets into a friction-scored, auto-prioritized Linear roadmap for under 10 cents in API tokens.

    51 min

About

Building is solved. You can spin up a Next.js app with Cursor and Claude in a single weekend. But turning a vibe-coded app into actual monthly recurring revenue (MRR) is brutally hard. This show is for indie hackers, solopreneurs, and semi-technical founders who want to escape the vibe revenue trap. We skip the launch day dopamine hits and the generic startup advice. Instead, we break down the exact practitioner receipts you need: automated validation workflows, token-aware pricing models, and the exact tech stacks (like Supabase and MCP) that stop your AI from hallucinating in production. No hype. Just the hard math and specific configurations required to build a sustainable SaaS in the era of vibe coding.