In 2019, 23.7% of new startups had a solo founder. By mid-2025 that number was 36.3%. Something structural shifted — and I think I know what it was. This is the story of how I spent six years inside product companies, identified the blocker that kept me from going solo, and finally removed it.
Six Years of Corporate Dysfunction
I spent six years building products at companies in Kyiv. I watched features that a single developer could ship in a day get stuck for months in approval chains. The average enterprise pull request sits untouched for four days before anyone looks at it — not because people are lazy, but because process overhead scales faster than teams do.
Meanwhile the products still shipped. Users still came. Revenue went up. The dysfunction was real and somehow it didn't matter, which made it more maddening, not less.
The companies weren't broken. They were just optimized for something other than speed. And once I understood that, I wanted out.
The Blocker Was Never Ideas or Time
I always wanted to build something of my own. The blocker wasn't ideas — I had plenty. It wasn't time. It was design.
I'm a backend-first developer. I can architect a system, write clean TypeScript, ship a reliable API. But I cannot make something look good. Hiring a designer for a product with unknown revenue felt like betting money I didn't have on odds I couldn't calculate.
So I waited. For five years, I waited.
Then the Calculus Changed
AI-generated design gave me a starting point — not Dribbble-worthy, but good enough to validate. AI coding assistance handled the parts that used to kill solo projects: boilerplate, tests, repetitive CRUD. Studies put the productivity gain at around 26% faster task completion and 60% more pull requests merged for daily AI users.
In practice, the product I'd have spent six months building alone took one month.
Six months is a bet I couldn't absorb. One month was survivable. That difference is everything.
What AI Actually Changed
Three things changed — and they're not the three things most people assume.
- Speed, but not uniformly. Boilerplate, scaffolding, tests: AI is dramatically faster. Architecture decisions, data modeling, security, product judgment: entirely mine. The honest number is somewhere between 2x and 4x depending on the task.
- The design blocker. This was the real unlock. Not "AI made me faster" but "AI removed the reason I'd been waiting for five years." That's categorically different.
- The risk threshold. The biggest change wasn't speed or design. It was that the investment became survivable. A one-month bet that fails costs one month. I could afford to be wrong. That changed everything psychologically.
What AI Didn't Change
Judgment. What to build, what to cut, how to price, what the product actually is — every meaningful decision was mine. AI amplifies execution. It doesn't supply taste, and it doesn't supply the years of watching products fail for reasons that had nothing to do with the code.
Distribution. This is where I'll be honest: I'm a developer. Building features is familiar. Distribution is alien. I catch myself opening VS Code when I should be talking to potential users. Shipping code feels like progress. Posting on Reddit feels like gambling. These are not rational responses, but they're real ones.
That 36.3% number — I think it's AI removing the design and time barriers that kept developers like me waiting. The window is real. The product side is solved. Distribution is the work that remains.
The Product I Built
I built Flowly — one workspace for tasks, timers, and analytics, for freelancers who are tired of running four separate apps to answer one question: where did my week go? I built it for myself first. I actually use it daily. That's either a great sign or a selection bias trap — I'm still figuring out which.
- Task management with natural language quick-add: type "review proposal tomorrow high priority #acme" and the task is created instantly
- Built-in time tracking: start a timer on any task, stop when done, analytics show where hours went by task and project
- Google Calendar sync, break reminders, and a today dashboard that shows only what matters right now
- Free tier available. 14-day Pro trial, no card required. $8/month on annual billing.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a solo developer really compete with funded teams in 2026?
For specific, well-defined tools — yes. The advantage isn't resources, it's proximity to the problem. A solo founder using the product daily will find and fix the friction that a larger team never notices. AI has narrowed the execution gap significantly: solo founders now represent 36.3% of new startups, up from 23.7% in 2019.
How much did AI actually speed up development?
Roughly 3-4x for the full product, but unevenly distributed. Boilerplate, tests, and scaffolding were dramatically faster. System design, data modeling, and product decisions took the same time — those require judgment that AI doesn't provide. The honest summary: AI made the survivable timeline possible, not the good decisions.
Why did you choose productivity as the product category?
Two reasons. First, I had the problem myself — I was running four separate apps (Todoist, Toggl, Google Calendar, a spreadsheet) and spending 45 minutes every Friday reconciling them. Second, productivity tools are used daily, which means feedback is fast and retention is meaningful. A tool someone uses once a week teaches you much less than one they open every morning.
What is Flowly and who is it for?
Flowly is a task manager with built-in time tracking, calendar sync, and analytics — built for freelancers and remote workers who want one place to manage work instead of four. Free tier available, 14-day Pro trial with no card required. flowly.run
Originally published at flowly.run/blog/why-i-built-flowly.
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