• Home
  • News
  • Personal Finance
    • Savings
    • Banking
    • Mortgage
    • Retirement
    • Taxes
    • Wealth
  • Make Money
  • Budgeting
  • Burrow
  • Investing
  • Credit Cards
  • Loans

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest finance news and updates directly to your inbox.

Top News

Affordable Health Insurance for Early Retirees

August 6, 2025

3 Types of Restaurants That People Are Flocking to — and One That’s Dying Out

August 6, 2025

13 Old Toys You Could Turn Into Ready Cash

August 6, 2025
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Trending
  • Affordable Health Insurance for Early Retirees
  • 3 Types of Restaurants That People Are Flocking to — and One That’s Dying Out
  • 13 Old Toys You Could Turn Into Ready Cash
  • Overcome Decision Fatigue With This Simple Framework
  • Goldman Sachs Data Shows AI’s Unemployment Impact
  • Business’s ‘Cult’ Back-to-School Products ‘Sell Out So Fast’
  • Cisco Hit With Data Breach Caused By a Voice Phishing Attack
  • What The One Big Beautiful Bill Means For Your Estate Plan
Wednesday, August 6
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Indenta
Subscribe For Alerts
  • Home
  • News
  • Personal Finance
    • Savings
    • Banking
    • Mortgage
    • Retirement
    • Taxes
    • Wealth
  • Make Money
  • Budgeting
  • Burrow
  • Investing
  • Credit Cards
  • Loans
Indenta
Home » How I Built a Profitable AI Startup Solo — And the 6 Mistakes I’d Never Make Again
Make Money

How I Built a Profitable AI Startup Solo — And the 6 Mistakes I’d Never Make Again

News RoomBy News RoomAugust 5, 20250 Views0
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email Tumblr Telegram

Entrepreneur

When I launched PhotoPacks.AI, I didn’t have a team or funding. Just an idea: offer studio-quality headshots, powered by AI, for a fraction of the cost of a traditional photo shoot. Today, the product works, and it’s growing steadily. But I’ve learned a lot of lessons the hard way.

Here are seven mistakes I made early on, and what I’d do differently if I had to start over.

1. I tried to build for everyone, and converted no one

At first, my startup offered everything: headshots, modeling photos, pet portraits, fantasy scenes. I figured, if AI could generate it, why not let people choose?

But when I showed it to friends and tried to market it, nobody understood what it was for. Zero conversions. The fix? I focused the product around one clear value: professional headshots. That change alone made the product click with users, and sales followed. I learned to be specific and found that a clear, focused message converts better than a broad one.

Start with a focused, singular use case. The more obvious the value, the faster you’ll get traction. You can always expand later, but don’t launch wide and vague.

2. I underpriced — and it backfired

I started with a $9.99 price point because I didn’t want to scare people away. I worried that raising prices would increase refund rates or kill momentum. But that attracted low-intent customers, increased refund requests and made the product feel cheap.

When I raised the price, sales didn’t drop — they got better. People treated the product more seriously. Refunds dropped. Revenue grew.

Test higher pricing earlier than you think. Pricing sends a signal. If you’re solving a real problem, price with confidence, not fear.

Related: Harnessing the Power of AI: 5 Game Changing Tactics for Small Businesses

3. I handled everything myself for too long

I handled support tickets, wrote copy, managed uptime, ran ads, pushed code — all in one day. It wasn’t sustainable. Eventually, I outsourced key pieces and bought back my time. It let me focus on strategy, product and growth.

Don’t confuse “solo” with “doing it all.” Delegate repetitive tasks early. Protect your cognitive bandwidth — it’s your most valuable resource.

Related: AI for the Underdog — Here’s How Small Businesses Can Thrive With Artificial Intelligence

4. I over-engineered the first version

I spent months perfecting features before launch, including ones no one had asked for. I wanted it to look polished and impressive from day one.

Looking back, I should have released a simpler version much earlier and shaped the product around real user feedback. The bells and whistles can wait. What matters most is whether people want what you’re building in the first place.

Launching lean doesn’t mean lowering standards — it means prioritizing clarity over complexity. Get a simple version live, then iterate. Early users don’t expect perfection — they want progress. Speed beats polish.

5. I bet too much on SEO, not enough on community

Early on, I hired an SEO agency to create keyword-optimized content. But most of my actual traffic came from Reddit, where I had been engaging directly with communities.

That still holds true today. My best-performing traffic continues to come from organic conversations, not blog content. The lesson? Your ideal customers are already hanging out somewhere. Find them, show up authentically, and focus on what’s actually driving results, not what’s supposed to.

Go where your users already hang out. Be useful in those spaces. Authenticity scales better than SEO tricks, especially early on.

6. I underestimated how fast AI evolves

Even after spending a year immersed in generative AI, I was still caught off guard by how fast things moved once I launched. What felt groundbreaking one month felt outdated the next.

It’s thrilling, but it’s also exhausting. Trying to keep up with every new development is a recipe for burnout.

Instead of chasing trends, I’ve learned to build around stable, lasting value. Keeping up matters — but not at the expense of your sanity or strategy.

Start simple — learn fast

If you’re a solo founder in AI, here’s my advice: Don’t try to create demand from scratch. Find an underserved audience, meet a clear need and launch fast. Don’t fall in love with your vision. Fall in love with solving problems.

You don’t need to get it all right — just get it out there, learn and keep going.

Ready to break through your revenue ceiling? Join us at Level Up, a conference for ambitious business leaders to unlock new growth opportunities.

When I launched PhotoPacks.AI, I didn’t have a team or funding. Just an idea: offer studio-quality headshots, powered by AI, for a fraction of the cost of a traditional photo shoot. Today, the product works, and it’s growing steadily. But I’ve learned a lot of lessons the hard way.

Here are seven mistakes I made early on, and what I’d do differently if I had to start over.

1. I tried to build for everyone, and converted no one

The rest of this article is locked.

Join Entrepreneur+ today for access.

Read the full article here

Featured
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Articles

3 Types of Restaurants That People Are Flocking to — and One That’s Dying Out

Burrow August 6, 2025

13 Old Toys You Could Turn Into Ready Cash

Make Money August 6, 2025

Overcome Decision Fatigue With This Simple Framework

Make Money August 6, 2025

Goldman Sachs Data Shows AI’s Unemployment Impact

Investing August 6, 2025

Business’s ‘Cult’ Back-to-School Products ‘Sell Out So Fast’

Make Money August 6, 2025

Cisco Hit With Data Breach Caused By a Voice Phishing Attack

Make Money August 6, 2025
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Demo
Top News

3 Types of Restaurants That People Are Flocking to — and One That’s Dying Out

August 6, 20250 Views

13 Old Toys You Could Turn Into Ready Cash

August 6, 20250 Views

Overcome Decision Fatigue With This Simple Framework

August 6, 20250 Views

Goldman Sachs Data Shows AI’s Unemployment Impact

August 6, 20250 Views
Don't Miss

Business’s ‘Cult’ Back-to-School Products ‘Sell Out So Fast’

By News RoomAugust 6, 2025

When Jacqueline Tatelman and her husband, Scot Tatelman, founded a nonprofit summer camp for hundreds…

Cisco Hit With Data Breach Caused By a Voice Phishing Attack

August 6, 2025

What The One Big Beautiful Bill Means For Your Estate Plan

August 5, 2025

8 Things You Must Do When Your Savings Reach $100,000

August 5, 2025
About Us

Your number 1 source for the latest finance, making money, saving money and budgeting. follow us now to get the news that matters to you.

We're accepting new partnerships right now.

Email Us: [email protected]

Our Picks

Affordable Health Insurance for Early Retirees

August 6, 2025

3 Types of Restaurants That People Are Flocking to — and One That’s Dying Out

August 6, 2025

13 Old Toys You Could Turn Into Ready Cash

August 6, 2025
Most Popular

Proposed Changes To Phone Services For Social Security Beneficiaries Raise Concerns—Again

August 1, 20251 Views

6 of the Healthiest Foods (and Drinks) You Can Buy at Dollar Tree

August 1, 20251 Views

5 Streaming TV Services That Viewers Love Most in 2025 — and the Ones They Don’t

July 31, 20251 Views
Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Dribbble
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact
© 2025 Inodebta. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.