From "go find me a co-founder who can code" to shipping it myself
As an entrepreneur of 16 years and a serial founder, code was always the single limiting factor in every project I touched. Not the idea, not the market. Code. More precisely: finding the right people who could actually build, and who could function as a real co-founder for whatever I was trying to launch. Saying that "isn't easy" is probably the understatement of the decade.
Then in February 2025 I was laid off. I started job searching in a market everyone could see was in a bad place, and I made a decision: if it didn't work out, I would build something of my own. That decision came right after I read about Lovable for the first time.
Since then I have shipped 15 projects. Six are published, two are platform tools running inside my day job, and the latest is a SaaS product launching right here on Product Hunt in four weeks. That is what a single year on Lovable looks like for one person.
Lovable removes the constraint that blocked so many of my ideas over the years. It lets solo founders and small teams ship, iterate, and improve at a pace I have not seen matched anywhere else.
What has stayed with me most is the pace of Lovable's own improvement. Over the last 16 months it has been staggering. Each release unlocks more complex apps and workflows than the last. Credit burn was a genuine pain point a year ago, and I'll be honest about that, but once you perfect your prompting methodology and build a consistent prompting structure, it becomes as efficient as it gets. What used to feel like a cost problem turned out to be a discipline problem on my end, met halfway by relentless improvement on theirs.
If I had to name the areas that moved the most over the past 12 months: integrations, testing, and security. Those three are exactly where a "prototype tool" usually falls apart, and they are now genuine strengths.
And that is the real story. Lovable started as something you reached for to spin up landing pages and prototypes. Today it is a full-stack engineering hub. The quality and complexity of what you can ship is no longer capped by the tool. The ceiling has moved from the software to the operator. The only limit left is your own capability.
For any non-technical founder who has ever been blocked waiting on engineering talent: this changes the math entirely.