zologic

zologic

Founder. Builder. Friction finder.

About

Serial founder from Den Haag, Netherlands. Built Market Physics Engine after learning the hard way that traditional validation measures intent, not adoption. I had an idea everyone said was needed. It still didn't spread. That gap is where most startups die. Also founder of Zologic (AI commerce for WooCommerce) and City Shower (hygiene access for the homeless in NL).

Badges

Tastemaker
Tastemaker
Gone streaking
Gone streaking

Maker History

  • Market Physics Engine
    Market Physics EngineSimulate startup adoption friction before you build anything
    Mar 2026
  • 🎉
    Joined Product HuntMarch 16th, 2026

Forums

zologic

1d ago

From a vacant school in Rotterdam to launching a behavioral adoption simulator — hey PH 👋

I m Almin, based in Den Haag.

In 2020 I was living in a vacant school in Rotterdam after a divorce. During that time I built City Shower a hygiene access network for homeless people in the Netherlands.

Everyone agreed it was needed.
It still didn t spread the way I expected.

That gap between intent and real adoption became an obsession.

zologic

1d ago

Market Physics Engine - Simulate startup adoption friction before you build anything

Most validation tools measure intent. Market Physics measures adoption behavior. Submit your pitch → 12 stakeholder personas are generated → 10,000 synthetic agents simulate adoption across 12 market periods → you get an Idea Fitness Index, friction profile, and benchmark comparison against Airbnb, Uber, Stripe, and Slack. Grounded in Prospect Theory, Bass Diffusion, and network diffusion science. Free tier — 3 simulations, no credit card required.
Na'ama Moran

4mo ago

How to Build Operations Into Your Business

For many small companies, things start to unravel not because the idea is bad, but because the operations can t scale. How can you tell? Well, it s like that dream where the harder you swim, the further you end up from shore; you just can t keep up. You ve been caught in a riptide. It s at this point that it s worth pausing for a minute and sorting out your operations. By operations, I mean the processes, systems, and tools that not only keep your head above water but get you moving forward once again. The obvious problem with focusing on operations is that many founders find it boring or even a distraction from their top concern with product and sales. It s more fun to build the product, tinker with the UX, and keep shipping new features. But just like high school English class, boring doesn t mean you should skip it. In fact, I believe you need to start thinking about systems from day one. That s because one of the things I ve noticed in my nearly 20 years of running companies is that many early-stage founders have a great idea. What they don t have is a system to validate whether this idea can turn into a business. Ops only gets trickier as you transition from starting a company to growing it. That s where things almost unraveled for my last company, Cheetah Technologies, an e-commerce and logistics-tech company catering to independent restaurants. We were fortunate to get a lot of product-market fit early on, and within a year of launching, we d raised >$6 million in venture funding. Within 3 years of launching, we were serving thousands of independent restaurants across multiple geographies. That meant a lot of processes needed to be built: hiring, onboarding, retaining and promoting talent, evaluating performance, motivating people, communicating internally, communicating with investors, and solving myriad challenges as they came up. There s a lot. And, I think, we did it really well. But there was one operational challenge we didn t have locked down, which ended up hurting us. Post-Covid, we were going to accelerate our revenue growth by acquiring a few smaller competitors, and we created systems to hire M&A professionals. The process was extensive, including interviews and validation exercises. But after the contract was signed, we took a step back, assuming the people we hired would get us there with little oversight. We didn t have the right processes in place for monitoring the performance of these new hires. The post-M&A integration was a disaster, and, as a result, we lost millions of dollars; it was a huge setback for the company. I don t want other startup founders to be unable to scale because they didn t get their operations right. Ops Doesn t Have to Be Onerous Right now, many people are using no-code platforms to spin up software. What if you could use a no-ops platform to plug into systems, tools, and frameworks to help you build, grow, and lead your company without hiring an operations person too early? That s what we re building at Waya: from an executive summary generator tool that uses Retrieval Augmented Generation to make sure your idea is sound and fundable, to frameworks for managing and evaluating team performance so you can scale. But I m just a startup founder, too, looking to validate that what I think is a great idea will actually work. So I m offering 1 hour of free startup consultation for every 1 hour of user testing. You can ask me anything about fundraising, investor relations, go-to-market, building and scaling teams, etc. In return, I will give you a sneak peek into our brand-new product and let you take it for a test drive. Sign up here: https://wayaframes.com/promotion... And I d love to get in touch on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/naam...
View more