This week: I replaced a R2,000/month SaaS tool for R800 in a single chaotic day. The AI helped. The AI also broke things. There's a lesson in there somewhere.

Plus: why "visible enough" beats viral, a free masterclass on the strategy that grew my list 40%, and the internet finally admitting community isn't a warm fuzzy.

Let's go. 👇

COMMUNITY BUSINESSES IRL:

Six Ways To Grow Without Going Viral

👀 Visible Enough Is The New Viral: We've all been told visibility is currency. So we posted daily, chased trends, and danced for the algorithm — and got tired instead of clients. Taylor Aller (TEDx speaker) came to our community and dismantled the whole hamster wheel in under an hour. Referable beats visible. Every time. Watch the replay.

📦 Bundles - Not Just For Firewood: Allison Hardy went from 4K to 11K subscribers by building bundles — and she's running a free masterclass for our community on exactly how. There's a reason I begged her to do this → check it out.

📉 Creator Economy Gets Real Job: Forbes says 2026 is when the creator economy stops vibing and starts adulting. 48.7% of creators still earn under $10K a year. The gap between "content creator" and "creator-entrepreneur" is becoming a canyon — and only one side owns their audience.

🔮 Circle Brought The Community Receipts: Circle's 2026 Trends Report officially confirmed what we've been yelling into the void: community is a growth engine, not a warm fuzzy. Handy ammunition for when someone at a braai asks "but does community actually work?"

🧫 Micro-Communities Ate The Algorithm: The most successful brands in 2026 aren't chasing followers — they're building micro-cultures. Not influencer marketing. Not loyalty programmes. Just actual humans forming actual connections. Revolutionary, apparently.

🎙️ Travel Podcast, Zero Chill Given: Like Andy Sachs walking into Runway and accidentally owning the room — I ended up on a travel industry podcast talking Ubuntu, automation, and why treating every other business as competition is the most expensive mistake going. Simone poured wine. I poured receipts.

THE BUSINESS OF COMMUNITY

I Vibe Coded My Own Diagnostic App — Here's What Broke

I was paying $99/R2,000 a month for a tool that sends people a survey and emails them a PDF.

That's it. That's what it did. Survey. Score. PDF. Two thousand rand. Every month. For three months.

And then one Tuesday, I opened Bolt.new and mass-ruined my own week.

The subscription that haunted me

Score App is one of those tools that does exactly one thing really well — and charges you like it invented the concept. You build a scorecard, people fill it in, they get a report. Clean. Simple. Expensive.

I was using it to run my 5-Fit Business Scorecard — a 35-question assessment that tells founders which part of their business is on fire (and not in the good way). It worked. But every month when that R2,000 invoice landed, I'd stare at it and think: I'm paying premium rent for a glorified Google Form with a calculator.

The thing is, I couldn't customise it the way I wanted. I wanted cohort comparisons. I wanted to see trends across submissions. I wanted to control the email flow without navigating someone else's clunky dashboard. But Score App said no — or rather, Score App said "upgrade to Enterprise", which is corporate-speak for no.

R800 and one chaotic day

So I did what any reasonable person with a Bolt.new subscription and too much confidence would do. I vibe coded the entire thing.

Here's how it went:

Step 1: I wrote a detailed spec in Notion — every screen, every flow, every edge case. This is the part most people skip. Don't skip it. Your AI coding tool is only as good as the brief you give it.

Step 2: I uploaded everything into Lovable first and burned through all the free credits building a working prototype. Then — and this is the move — I asked Lovable to rewrite the spec based on what it had built. That refined spec became my golden ticket.

Step 3: I took that spec into Bolt.new and rebuilt the whole thing with fresh credits. One day. One very long, very caffeinated day.

The result? An app that does more than Score App ever did:

  • Email verification built into step one (no more wrong-email disasters)

  • Magic link login — no passwords, no friction

  • Auto-save so people can leave mid-survey and come back

  • Dynamic results page with per-pillar breakdowns and personalised copy

  • PDF report generated and emailed automatically

  • Admin dashboard with individual responses, cohort comparisons, and trend data across every submission

Total cost: R400 + R400 in extra Bolt credits when something broke. Which brings me to...

What broke (and the one rule that saved me)

Here's the part nobody tells you about vibe coding: it will break your things while trying to fix your things.

I'd built the front end first — the survey form, the quiz flow, the whole respondent experience — and it was working beautifully. Then I started building the admin dashboard. And while Bolt was building the management side, it quietly rewrote my survey form. The form I'd already finished. The form that was working.

Suddenly the survey was broken, but the backend was unfinished.

I tried to fix it. Ran out of credits. Had to buy more credits just to undo the damage, rebuild the survey, and then finish the backend I was trying to build in the first place. It was like paying a builder to renovate your kitchen and coming home to find they'd also knocked down a load-bearing wall in the lounge — helpfully, of course.

The lesson? Always tell your AI: "We are troubleshooting. You are not allowed to execute right now."

If you don't set that guardrail, vibe coding tools will happily recode your entire front end while you're asking a hypothetical question. They're eager like that. Dangerously eager.

So when should you actually vibe code?

This is the real question. And I think the answer is simpler than most people make it:

Vibe code when you need an internal tool that solves a current problem.

Don't vibe code your next big product launch. Don't use it to build something you're selling to thousands of people on day one. But if you're paying for a SaaS tool that does one specific thing, and you keep wishing it did that thing slightly differently — that's your sign.

The difference between "build" and "productise" matters. I built this scorecard app for me. It runs my assessment, collects my data, and feeds my admin dashboard. If it gets traction and people start using it at scale, then I'll invest in proper backend development. But for now? It works. It's mine. And it costs me nothing per month.

That's the real power of vibe coding for founders: you stop renting tools and start owning systems.

One of my clients vibe coded his own Circle community platform replacement and his own Luma replacement. He spent more on credits than I did, but compared to what he was paying monthly for both platforms? He'll break even in no time.

The tools aren't perfect. The process is messy. You will want to throw your laptop. But when you come out the other side with something that does exactly what you need — and you can fix it yourself when it breaks — there's no subscription invoice in the world that compares to that feeling.

Curious what your business actually looks like under the hood? I built this scorecard to find out.

Take the free 5-Fit Scorecard and see which part of your business needs attention — it takes about 12 minutes and you'll get a personalised report with specific next steps.

Yes, it's the vibe-coded one. Yes, it works. Probably.

P.S. — If you try the scorecard and something breaks, tell me.

Honestly. I'd rather know now than find out from a stranger on LinkedIn. That's the beauty of building your own systems: you can actually fix them. 🙃

FROM OUR FRIENDS AT MORNING BREW:

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