I'm 18. BTech CS student in India.
Everyone around me is grinding Leetcode, preparing for placement season, optimizing for offer letters.
I made a different choice.
I spent the last 4 months building XEdge — an AI tool discovery platform — completely solo, zero budget, while attending college.
Here's what that choice produced:
500+ users from 0
160+ curated AI tools
15 business execution playbooks
2,420 LinkedIn impressions on a single post
A Gumroad store ready to make first revenue
A pitch deck submitted to a VC fund
A skill set no placement interview ever tested
I'm not saying placement is wrong.
I'm saying it's not the only path and for a lot of people it's not even the best one.
The skills I learned building XEdge:
— How to validate an idea before building
— How to acquire users with zero budget
— How to price and sell digital products
— How to write content that reaches thousands
— How to build in public and turn struggle into marketing
None of that was on my syllabus.
If you're a CS student reading this — you don't have to choose between placement and building. But if you're only doing one of them, make sure it's the one that still matters in 5 years.
xedge.tech — built by a student, for builders.
Top comments (1)
As someone who spends more time building than collecting certificates, I completely agree with this.
A real product forces you to learn architecture, marketing, customer psychology, pricing, support, sales and execution at the same time. Those lessons are difficult to learn in a classroom or from coding challenges alone.
Leetcode may get you hired. Building teaches you how to create opportunities for yourself and others.