
We Built a Company That Ships Your Complete Software Product in 14 Days — Free First. Yes, Really.
There are three sentences I say to founders almost every week that almost no one believes the first time:
- We don't build MVPs. We build the complete product.
- We ship it in 14 days.
- The first project is free.
The first reaction is always the same. A pause. A polite smile. The unspoken assumption that there must be a catch.
There isn't one. Taken together, these three sentences describe the most genuinely revolutionary shift in how software gets built since the move to cloud — and almost no one is talking about it yet.
This post is for the developers, technical founders, and engineering leaders who keep asking me "how is that possible?" Here's the honest answer, claim by claim.
"We Don't Build MVPs. We Build the Complete Product."
The minimum viable product. The most-quoted phrase in startup land. For fifteen years, every founder heard the same advice: ship the smallest possible version, learn fast, iterate.
It was good advice in 2010. It became terrible advice somewhere around 2022.
Here is what an MVP actually looks like in 2026:
- A login page that breaks on mobile
- Three features that work, two that don't
- No payments — that was "phase 2"
- A database that wasn't designed for scale
- No tests
- A founder telling investors "we'll harden it later"
This is what most founders ship. Then they wonder why their conversion rate is 0.4%, why customers don't trust them, why churn is 80%.
It is not a product problem. It is not a market problem.
It is that users no longer grade you on a curve. They have used Stripe and Notion and Linear. They compare your product to the best one they have ever touched. Ship half a product in 2026 and they leave in 30 seconds.
The MVP framework was a coping mechanism for an era when shipping software was slow. That era is over.
So we don't ship MVPs. We ship the complete product — authentication, payments, dashboards, mobile-responsive, tested, deployed, documented. The actual thing you would be proud to put on Product Hunt. Not a demo. Not a v0.1. The product.
This is the first claim, and it is non-negotiable.
"We Ship It in 14 Days."
This is the part developers find hardest to believe.
For twenty years, "real software" meant three to six months minimum. Discovery sprints. Design sprints. Multiple dev cycles. QA. Most agencies still operate on that timeline.
We do not. And it is not because we cut corners or hire offshore for cheap.
It is because the economics of software actually changed. Senior engineers paired with the right AI tools ship roughly four to six times faster than they did three years ago, with equal or higher quality. We restructured the entire company around that reality. Every day in the build has a clear deliverable. No discovery sprints. No alignment weeks. No buffer days.
The structure is the discipline.
Other companies have not caught up yet because they are still organized around 2019's economics. Their billing models, their staffing models, their pricing — all of it assumes software takes six months. They cannot drop to fourteen days without dismantling themselves.
We were built around fourteen days from day one. Day 0 is a written scope. Day 1-3 is foundation. Day 4-11 is build and polish. Day 12 is QA. Day 13 is deploy and documentation. Day 14 is handover. No slack in the schedule — and no slack needed, because the team is small, senior, and AI-augmented.
This is the second claim, and it works because the company was designed around it from the start.
"The First Project Is Free."
This is the one that sounds like a scam.
No credit card. No subscription. No contract. You describe your idea. We build the complete, production-ready product. You keep the source code in your own GitHub repository. If you never work with us again, you walk away with everything we built. Nothing comes off your card. Ever.
Why would anyone do that?
Because we are not a "close the deal in the first meeting" company. We are building a long relationship with the founder, not a transaction. The only way to start a real relationship is to prove something, not promise it.
Most agencies pitch you for three weeks, then send a $50,000 contract. Most SaaS tools offer a 14-day trial with a card on file. Most AI builders promise the world and ship a broken demo.
We do the opposite. We just build the thing. Then you decide.
If the work is good, you come back. Most founders need a second product, a refactor, a new feature, a different vertical, a B2B version of the B2C app, a mobile app to pair with the web one. The work compounds naturally. We don't need a contract to lock you in — we need to actually be good.
If the work is bad, you walk away with the product, no money lost. Either way, the founder wins.
The free first project is not a discount. It is not a loss leader. It is the company.
This is the third claim, and it is the one that puts our money where our mouth is.
Why These Three Together Are Revolutionary
A free MVP would be a gimmick — half-finished software given away to lock you into a paid tier. You have seen that move a thousand times.
But a free, complete, production-ready product, shipped in 14 days, with full source-code ownership and no contract — that is a fundamentally new thing in the software industry. As far as we know, we are the only company in the world doing this combination.
It changes the founder's calculation completely.
You used to ask:
"Can I afford to gamble $50,000 on an agency I have never worked with?"
Now you get to ask:
"Do I actually have an idea I want to ship?"
That second question is the right question. That is the question every founder should be asking. Money, time, contracts, vendor lock-in — we removed all of it on purpose.
If you have an idea, you should be shipping it. Everything else is friction we deleted.
What This Doesn't Mean (The Honest Part)
We are upfront about a few things, because we want every founder to have a clear picture before they start:
- "Free" means the build itself is free. Source code in your GitHub. Live preview running on our infrastructure during the demo window. Full IP transfer. Hosting on your own cloud, deployment pipelines to your cloud, mobile App Store or Play Store submission, and ongoing maintenance past Day 14 are paid add-ons. We tell you this in the first conversation, not after.
- "14 days" means we build the scope you sign off on at Day 0. We do not promise "whatever you want in 14 days." We promise the scope, in 14 days.
- "Complete product" means production-ready — the kind of thing you can put in front of real users without being embarrassed. It does not mean "feature-complete forever." The next thing is the next project.
These caveats are part of the deal, and they are written down before any code gets written. No surprises on Day 14.
Why I'm Writing This
Founders have been pitched a thousand promises by a thousand agencies over the years. Most of those promises turned out to be incomplete, expensive, or both.
So when we say "free, 14 days, complete product, no MVP, revolutionary," I understand the instinct is suspicion. I would be suspicious too.
The only response I have is to make the offer real enough that you can test it without risk. No card, no contract, no catch. You bring an idea. We build the product. You keep the code.
If we are right about this, founders will keep coming back, and we will build a company that lasts a long time. If we are wrong, we lose money on a few projects and learn something.
We are okay with that bet. The economics of software changed. Someone has to be the company that operates as if that change is real.
That is us.
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