Your App Is Not a Business: Why Vibe Coding Isn't Enough
By Jack Butcher

You built an app in a weekend. AI wrote the code. You tweaked the UI. You deployed it. You posted the screenshot.
Now what?
What you think you need: - A business plan - A business card - A mission statement - A website - An office What you actually need: - A customer
— @jackbutcher
An app is not a business. An app is a tool. A business is a tool that someone pays to use. The distance between those two things is enormous, and AI doesn't close it.
The Vibe Coding Illusion
AI made building trivially easy. A working product takes hours, not months. This feels like progress. It is progress — on the easiest part of the problem.

The hard part was never writing the code. The hard part is finding the person with the problem, communicating that you can solve it, and getting them to trust you enough to pay.
A tiny goal that will change your life: Make $1 on the internet.
— @jackbutcher
Revenue Is the Only Validation That Counts
Before the second feature. Before the redesign. Before the Product Hunt launch. Can you get one person to hand you money for it?
Revenue is the only signal that isn't noise. Likes are noise. Signups are noise. A credit card on file is signal.
Business building: Get one person to believe in what you're doing. Repeat.
— @jackbutcher
Outcomes, Not Features
Nobody buys software. They buy what the software does for them. The feature list is irrelevant. The transformation is everything.
We buy outcomes, not products.
— @jackbutcher
Your app is a vehicle. The destination is what they're paying for. If you can't articulate the destination in one sentence, you don't have a product — you have a project.

Stop building apps. Start building businesses. The difference is one word: customer.
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