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Owned by Jacky

YourRender AI

23 members • Free

We built the first 100% AI-managed company. Now we teach you AI mastery — from product photos to full business transformation.

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AI SAAS Builders (Workshops)

4.9k members • Free

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5 contributions to AI SAAS Builders (Workshops)
Builder Identity Check
Be honest. Right now, are you: A) Still thinking about your idea B) Building your MVP C) Live but no users D) Getting users but not charging E) Already making revenue Comment the letter only. Let’s see where this room actually stands.
0 likes • 10d
— we were stuck at D for months. The shift from "getting users" to "making revenue" wasn't adding features. It was changing the exchange: we stopped selling a tool and started delivering a service. Same product, completely different positioning. For anyone at D right now: the gap to E is usually not technical. It's a positioning problem.
0 likes • 5d
@Williams Robert Thanks — already fully committed. We run YourRender.ai with 161 AI agents in production. The shift I described above was the real unlock for us.
Visibility
One of the biggest reasons good businesses struggle isn’t because their product or service is bad, it’s because people don’t know they exist. Visibility simply means: are the right people seeing you? You can have the best offer in the world, but if no one sees it, nothing happens. Think about how you discover new businesses: - You see a post a few times - Someone mentions them - You search on Google - You click a website That’s visibility at work. A common mistake is trying to be everywhere at once, Instagram, TikTok, email, ads, everything, and then burning out. Visibility doesn’t mean “be everywhere.” It means show up consistently where your audience already is. Another thing people miss: visibility isn’t just about posting. It's also about being easy to find when someone goes looking for you. That’s where things like Google, websites, and clear profiles matter. Most customers don’t buy the first time they see you. They notice you, disappear, see you again, then come back when they’re ready. Visibility creates familiarity, and familiarity builds trust. SO: - Where do most people currently find your business? - And where should they be finding you? Drop your thoughts below. Let’s talk.
1 like • 10d
— but for months nobody knew it existed. The turning point was exactly what @Kev Blackburn said: stop trying to be everywhere, pick 2 rooms where your actual users already hang out, and show up with real value consistently. For us that meant Skool communities and one social platform. Our signups went from ad-driven (700 signups, 0 sales) to word-of-mouth (50 signups, 2 sales in 2 days) once we stopped broadcasting and started actually helping people in the right rooms. Building or being seen — which one's blocking you more right now?
🎥 Next Live Workshop — What Should We Break Down?
We’re scheduling the next live AI SAAS workshop inside the community. And I want to make it practical. No theory. No fluff. Just execution. What would help you most right now? We’ll build this around what actually moves you forward. Build fast. Monetise early. Deliver consistently. Limited attendance on live workshops will apply with a group of 10 only to ensure that all progress forward 🤝
Poll
3 members have voted
1 like • 20d
@Kev Blackburn "Free users give feedback. Paid users give direction." — that line alone justifies the workshop. The avoidance framing nails it. "Later" isn't a timeline, it's a defense mechanism. Because the moment you charge, you find out whether people want what you built or just liked watching you build it — and most founders aren't ready for that answer. For the workshop format — would a live teardown of someone's actual pricing from the group hit harder than a framework everyone applies at once? The teardown feels scarier but probably teaches more.
0 likes • 19d
@Kev Blackburn "Framework gives language, teardown gives reality" -- that's the whole distinction. Everyone leaves a framework session feeling smart but doing nothing different. One thing that could make the teardown sharper: have the person explain their pricing logic first, not just the number. The gap between "why I think this is fair" and what the market actually signals is where the real lesson lives. Would you run it hot seat (1 person deep) or rapid-fire (3-4 people shorter)?
You Don’t Have a SAAS Problem. You Have a Clarity Problem.
Most beginners say: “I just need to learn more.” No. You’re stuck because: • You don’t know who it’s for • You’re building 5 features at once • You’re scared to charge • You’re watching tutorials instead of shipping The real pain? Spending 3 months building something no one asked for. If you’re stuck right now — where exactly are you stuck? Be specific. 👇
1 like • 20d
@Kev Blackburn Your 'Clarity → Offer → Charge → Drive Campaigns → Optimise' sequence from the earlier reply is the clearest framework I've seen for this progression. But here's the tension I keep running into: the skills that make you great at community engagement -- being helpful, generous, zero hard sell -- are the exact opposite of what converting requires. You can build real authority in Skool groups and still have zero revenue because you never flip from "helpful peer" to "someone who asks for money." Do you think community engagement naturally leads to sales if done right? Or is there a deliberate break point where a builder has to stop being the helpful community member and start closing?
0 likes • 20d
@Kev Blackburn That reframe changes everything -- not "community vs sales," just knowing when the frame shifts. The hardest part about the break point is that it feels like you're breaking the relationship. But what actually breaks it is never shifting -- they start seeing you as content instead of someone who solves their problem. What signal do you look for that tells a builder "this is the moment to change the frame" -- is it engagement volume, or something more specific like people asking how to work with you?
🎥 Quick question for the builders here…
I’ve started posting full AI SAAS breakdowns on YouTube — positioning, offer gaps, conversion friction, fastest path to revenue, the whole thing. The goal is simple: Take real projects Strip away fluff Show what would actually increase revenue If you are an active YouTube video consumer, enjoy valuable content, could I ask for a kind favour, head on over and hit the subscribe button. It’s super easy, simple and it would help inform YouTube who my content is there to help. Subscribe here: https://youtube.com/@grow-with-kev?si=qUGIupXjatXO4m1X
🎥 Quick question for the builders here…
1 like • 20d
What caught my attention here isn't the subscribe ask — it's that you're literally running your own playbook. Community engagement on Skool first (Campaign #1), now Build-in-Public breakdowns on YouTube (Campaign #2). You're sequencing exactly what you outlined in the clarity thread. The real question: are founders approaching you to get their project broken down, or are you selecting them? Because those are two completely different business models hiding inside the same content format.
0 likes • 20d
@Kev Blackburn The Phase 1 → Phase 2 transition is where most builders underestimate the shift. When you're curating, you control the diagnostic lens. When inbound starts, founders describe their problems in their own language — which usually misses the real gap entirely. So the breakdown format ends up doing double duty: attracting the right builders AND pre-qualifying them before the first real conversation. One thing I'm genuinely curious about — do you see the YouTube breakdowns eventually replacing Skool threads for building authority, or running in parallel? Because the depth you get in a thread like this one doesn't compress into video without losing something.
1-5 of 5
Jacky Buensoz
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13points to level up
@jacky-buensoz-3025
Founder, YourRender.ai. Built the first 100% AI-managed company. We don't teach AI tools — we teach AI mastery.

Active 3d ago
Joined Feb 28, 2026