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Simon Høiberg @[email protected]

249K subscribers - no pronouns :c

Do you want to learn about SaaS, Tech Startups, and how to b


Welcoem to posts!!

in the future - u will be able to do some more stuff here,,,!! like pat catgirl- i mean um yeah... for now u can only see others's posts :c

Simon Høiberg
Posted 3 days ago

For more than 1 month, a team of AI agents has been researching, writing, and publishing SEO-optimized blog posts for my business.

- By themselves.
- Fully autonomously.
- Zero human oversight.

Was it worth it? 😬
Or will Google penalize my websites?

Next week, I'm breaking it all down.
And I'll show you how to set up a similar workflow for yourself (no coding needed!)

Don't miss it!
🔔 Turn on notifications.

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Simon Høiberg
Posted 5 days ago

Most successful founders keep it dead simple.

Building a $10K MRR Micro SaaS while staying solo is possible - but you need to keep it simple too.

Here's the solopreneur stack I'd recommend.

1️⃣ Founder Layer
This is for you, the solo founder.
Make sure you have room and focus to plan and build.

If you're building on the side of a full-time job, set a dedicated timeslot aside every week. Consistency is key here.

2️⃣ Content Layer
The most effective, low-cost, and most beginner-friendly type of marketing is content.

Use tools like:
→ ChatGPT
→ Gemini
→ Claude
→ FeedHive

Focus on two channels:
→ LinkedIn (for text/image)
→ YouTube (for video)

This is all you need.

3️⃣ Product Layer
The product layer has two purposes:
→ Build the product
→ Serve your users

For building, use:
→ Cline
→ Lovable
→ Cursor

For serving, use:
→ Featurebase
→ Aidbase

4️⃣ Operational Layer
Finally, you need to operate your business.
This layer covers both automation + delegation.

For automation, use:
→ n8n
→ Custom GPTs
→ Notion
→ NocoDB
→ Make

For delegation, use:
→ Fiverr (for general tasks)
→ YT Jobs (for editing/script writing)

ℹ️ Bonus info:
For additional cost efficiency, you can self-host these tools for free:
- n8n
- NocoDB

And you can get these tools on a lifetime deal:
- FeedHive
- Aidbase

Go to www.founderstack.pro/ to see more.

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Simon Høiberg
Posted 1 week ago

Launching a Micro SaaS no longer requires deep engineering skills. All you need is No Code + AI.

However - if you want to launch and scale a good product, acquiring some technical skills will help you.

The good news is - you can learn as you go.

🟢 Level 1 (Beginner)

Use No Code tools like:
→ Bubble
→ Flutterflow
→ Glide

These are mostly drag-and-drop and require no engineering skills whatsoever. Perfect to get started.

🔵 Level 2 (Intermediate)

As you get a bit more tech-savvy, get started with AI coding tools like:
→ Lovable
→ Replit
→ Bolt
→ V0

These tools take a human-language first approach to engineering, and are perfect for technical people without actual programming experience.

🟠 Level 3 (Advanced)

Once you get familiar with some coding, you can use agentic tools like:
→ Cursor
→ Windsurf
→ Cline
→ GitHub Copilot

You can use these without being a professional software engineer, but they require some understanding of programming fundamentals to work well.

ℹ️ Micro SaaS requires no formal education.
You can absolutely (realistically) get to Level 3 in a year if you start today.

Once you get there, you might even have a $10K MRR Micro SaaS on your hands too.

Time to get started.

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Simon Høiberg
Posted 1 week ago

A list of career moves ranked by HIGH RISK to LOW RISK.

🔴 Get a job at FAANG
(Extreme risk)
You’ll be just another employee number, and being an "ex-Google" will make it very hard to find a new job (despite what you might think).

🔴 Climb the ladder in a corporate giant
(Very high risk)
Extreme responsibility with limited freedom and typically no ownership - pivoting to smaller, flexible roles later can be difficult.

🟠 Pursue a career in academia
(High risk)
Academic positions are hyper-competitive, low-paid, and often require years of underpaid work with no guarantee of long-term stability.

🔵 Move to an unstable startup
(Low-medium risk)
Startups offer rapid growth and unique learning experiences, building broad skills in a fast-paced environment.

🔵 Switch industries mid-career
(Low risk)
Brings fresh perspectives and broadens your skill set, making you more versatile and adaptable. Rarely as risky as people make it sound.

🟢 Become a freelancer or consultant
(Very low risk)
Provides independence and flexibility, allowing you to work on diverse projects and set your own schedule.

🟢 Start a business
(Very low risk)
Gives you full control, diverse income streams, and the freedom to navigate an uncertain world on your terms.

Why does it seem like most people get this list upside down? 🤔

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Simon Høiberg
Posted 2 weeks ago

Google started recommending FeedHive in their "AI Overview" - and it's driving noticeable traffic.

If you search for "best ai tools for social media" (or similar) there is a good chance FeedHive will be suggested here.

We're seeing results from Perplexity and OpenAI Search too, which recommend FeedHive under a similar query.

AI summaries like this will become the number 1 SEO driver in the future. I'm certain!

So how do you optimize for this?

Well... I'm not sure.

I know the reason we're appearing here is because we've been mentioned in listicles from very reputable publishers like Zapier, Synthesia, Sprout Social, and Shopify.

Having a strong backlink profile always mattered. But it seems to matter more than ever now.

AI overview optimization: Get mentioned in articles Google is likely to use for summarization.

I think that's about it.

Publishing blog posts for SEO?
Well, that's way down the list now.

I'd use AI for that...
It's not important enough to spend time on anymore.

What's your thoughts?
How can a new brand get into this summary?

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Simon Høiberg
Posted 2 weeks ago

It's not no-code vs custom code.
It's not AI or not AI.

It's all of it.
Combined 🔥

→ Use AI to help you code.
→ Use no-code automation.
→ Use visual drag-and-drop.

This is how it's going to be.
You better get used to it.

Take a look at these tools 👇
Start putting them to good use if you want to compete this year.

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Simon Høiberg
Posted 2 weeks ago

When people ask me which platform to prioritize - here's what I tell them:

- It doesn't depend.
- There is a one-size-fits-all.
- There is a simple answer to that question.

✅ It's long-form content on YouTube.

The formula is dead simple:
🔹 Create helpful video content.
🔹 Promote your products (tastefully).
🔹 Retarget viewers with video ads.

Takes time and effort.
Takes patience to learn.

But the ROI is quite literally unparalleled to any other social platform we currently have available.

Of course, this doesn't mean you shouldn't be active on other socials. Platforms like LinkedIn and Instagram can work very well too.

Below image shows 7-days of clicks.

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Simon Høiberg
Posted 3 weeks ago

The first big SaaS milestone: $10K MRR.
Here's how I get there with a new SaaS.

→ Product
Focus on the essentials.
Get users onboard early.
You want to get feedback as soon as possible.

→ Growth
Built virality into your product from day 1.
"Powered by" links.
Word of mouth (testimonials).

→ Content
Focus on long-form content.
Blog posts, YouTube tutorials.
Longer build-in-public posts.

→ Outreach
DMs, emails, communities.
You'll replace this method with inbound down the line - but in the beginning, this has huge payoff.

→ Work Focus
Spend most of your time on marketing and distribution. Don't get hung up on the product too early.

In my experience, the flywheel doesn't really kick in until after $10K MRR. Up until that point, it's hard work.

Use this cheat sheet, and you'll be solid!

---

How do I know?
Cause I've done it at least 3 times.

My SaaS portfolio has more than 50K users combined and is used by some of the hottest names in the bootstrapped startup scene.

Want to get on board?
Right now, you can get lifetime access to all my tools for a single one-time purchase.

See the comment below 👇


Get the ultimate software stack for founders - for a single one-time purchase.

📦 www.founderstack.pro/

It's a complete solution that covers social media marketing, AI customer support, link tracking, and graphic design.

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Simon Høiberg
Posted 1 month ago

People still think "real" startups are:
❌ Hustle-powered.
❌ VC-backed.
❌ Huge teams.

Startups in 2025 actually are:
✅ AI-powered.
✅ Lean & small teams.
✅ Automated revenue systems.

Here's my roadmap:

1️⃣ Content creation.
This part can be *entirely* handled by AI.

Tools:
→ GPT-4o fine-tuned models.
→ n8n automation/AI agents.
→ FeedHive for scheduling/publishing.

2️⃣ Blog posts.
This can also be *entirely* handled by AI.

Tools:
→ Perplexity for research.
→ GPT-o3 for writing.
→ Aidbase for including internal knowledge.
→ n8n to orchestrate the workflow.
→ Strapi to update & publish.

3️⃣ Product development.
This can also be *partially* handled by AI.

Tools:
→ Lovable for prototyping.
→ Cline for AI-assisted coding.

4️⃣ Collaboration
This is the human part.
⚠️ AI can *assist* here but should not handle this part.

Tools:
→ GitHub for code management.
→ Plane for project management.
→ Discord for conversations.
→ Miro for flows & charts.

5️⃣ Maintain
You need to keep your knowledge bases updated, your workflows running, and tweak and tune when the AI/automation runs errors (which will happen, it's not flawless).

This is not a future projection.
This IS HAPPENING right now - my own 4-person startup team is one example.

✨ Do you want to get a head start?
Get lifetime access to FeedHive + Aidbase for a single one-time purchase.

Go to www.founderstack.pro/ to learn how.

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Simon Høiberg
Posted 1 month ago

I run a YouTube channel and 4 profitable SaaS products (and I'm about to launch 2 more in 2025).

How do I manage it all and still maintain a healthy work-life balance? - It's a question I get often.

Let me explain.

I use Smart Work.
And below are some of the working systems I implement.

🔹 Prioritizing
I use The Eisenhower Matrix to pass on unimportant tasks (either by removing or delegating).

🔹 Rotation
I split my month into 4 weekly themes: Build week, Marketing week, Ops week, and "Slack" week. This allows me to cover all aspects of my business (including time to rest/think).

🔹 Work type
I strive to have *at most* 20% of my work be important but dreadful tasks and *at least* 30% be pure joy (even with no big impact). The remaining 50% is a mix of both.

🔹 Impact
I try to do 25% high-impact work every day. This is typically 1/4 tasks on my daily todo.

🔹 Work focus
In my build and marketing week, I split the time roughly as 50% marketing, 30% product, 20% user feedback. Both product and feedback fall under "Build week"

When I present this, people often question why I would have only 4 tasks/day and why I dedicate a whole week to slack/low-effort work.

But this is the secret ingredient.
You need to add slack to the system.

My business isn't where it is today because I "kept crushing it" and stuffing my calendar.

It's where it is today because I kept showing up for 4 years.

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