Hey Reader, My inbox is full of this. "Rob, can you help me launch my app?" "Is there a cheaper way to learn from you?" "I just need someone to show me WHERE to start..." Fine. You win. I'm dropping a BRAND NEW AI Coding Workshop. One day. One app. Once chance to join. What You Will LearnThis workshop is designed for non-technical people without prior knowledge. We will answer:
No theory. No fluff. Just you, me, and your app going live. Early Bird Special ($100 OFF)If you register today, you can lock in a heavy $100 OFF for when it launches. After that the price jumps to normal and stays there forever. This is for people who are DONE watching YouTube videos.
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Coder of 20+ years teaching non-technical people how to build their own software business in 30 days with AI. No devs or code required.
Hey Reader I need to confess something embarrassing. For years, I was the worst kind of engineer. The kind who spent 100 hours perfecting code for apps that never launched. Clean architecture. Zero bugs. Fully scalable. And completely worthless, because nobody used them. Here's The Painful Truth While I was busy "doing it right"... Non-technical founders were shipping garbage code and making money. My perfect projects were sitting in GitHub repos. Their messy apps took daily payments. The...
Hey Reader, I just spent hours building the exact same app twice. Same prompt. Same tech stack. Same features. The only difference was that one used Claude Sonnet 4.5 (Claude Code), and the other used GPT-5 (Codex CLI). And holy sh*t, the results were not even close. Let me show you what happened. The Test I built a simple to-do list app with user authentication. Nothing crazy. Just login, add tasks, edit them, delete them. I even told both models: "Keep it super secure." Should be easy...
Hey Reader, Two days ago my student messaged me. He was almost angry... "GPT-5 worked for 23 minutes and then said it doesn't understand!" Oof. That's rough, and I know how this feels. But that's when it hit me. We're all prompting AI wrong. Everyone of us. The $200,000 Mistake Big tech pays prompt engineers $200k+/year. Because they know what a difference of good prompts. Imagine telling your GPS "go somewhere nice" instead of an actual address One gets you lost. One gets you there. So I did...