Code solo. Ship
together.
A private community for indie developers and makers who are past the tutorials and ready to build alongside peers.
1,247 developers already on the list
I needed someone who'd already debugged this.
“Not a tutorial. Not a course promising passive income. Just someone who'd already wrestled with the same error at 2am and knew the fix.”
In 2023, I was six months into building my first SaaS. My code was getting better. I was shipping features consistently. But I was stuck on the business side — pricing experiments, finding early users, knowing when to pivot versus when to persevere.
I scoured Reddit, joined Discord servers, read every indie hacker thread I could find. The advice was either from people just starting out, or from founders years ahead of me whose context was completely different.
What I needed was a group of peers at the same stage — not beginners, not Series A founders — just other developers in the messy middle, sharing real experiences like you do when you find your people at a conference hallway track.
That's Assembly. Not a course. Not a expensive mastermind. A private space where the conversation flows and the advice comes from people who are actually building right now.
Late night notes
Ask in the Launch Tactics thread →
This is what the community sounds like.
Actual exchanges between developers — anonymized with permission. This is the kind of conversation happening in scattered DMs. Assembly gives it a home.
Shared with permission · names changed
Shared with permission · names changed
These conversations were happening in scattered DMs, buried in Slack threads, lost in Discord. Assembly gives them a permanent home.
Channels organized by the problems you actually face.
No general chatter. No endless introductions. Every channel has a specific purpose — to get you answers faster than Stack Overflow or Twitter.
Finding First Users
Cold outreach, Product Hunt launches, and the channels that actually convert for dev tools.
How I got my first 100 users without spending on ads (the Hacker News strategy)
Cold DMs on LinkedIn — my template that gets 15% reply rate
Product Hunt launch day playbook: what worked vs what flopped
Pricing & Revenue
Freemium vs paid, usage-based vs seat-based, and finding the sweet spot.
I raised prices 40% and churn barely moved. Here's the data.
Usage-based billing with Stripe — implementation horror stories
Annual vs monthly: how I convinced 30% to prepay yearly
Technical Architecture
Scaling decisions, database choices, and the tech debt you'll thank yourself for.
Why I migrated from Firebase to Postgres (and would do it again)
Vercel vs Railway vs Fly.io: 6 months of real usage data
Self-hosted vs managed: the $2k mistake I made with Redis
Side Project to Product
Making the leap from weekend hack to real business.
The moment I knew my side project could pay my rent
Quitting my job: the financial runway calculation that gave me confidence
Working in public: how much to share before you launch
Marketing for Devs
Content strategy, SEO, Twitter growth, and channels that don't feel gross.
Technical blog posts that convert: my writing framework
Twitter audience building without being cringe — a guide
Show & Tell
Launch announcements, milestone celebrations, and weekly wins.
First $100 MRR — I'm crying in the club right now 🎊
What hitting $1k MRR actually changed (and what didn't)
6 channels at launch · more added based on what members actually need
You won't be the only one shipping.
1,247 developers and makers have already claimed their spot. Here's some of the crew.
“I've been building solo for three years. Assembly is the first community where people actually understand what it's like to be between 'learning to code' and 'running a team.'”
— Morgan K., full-stack dev · Seattle
The workspace is almost ready. Reserve your seat.
Assembly opens in Q2 2026. Join the waitlist and you'll be first through the door — before we cap membership to keep the signal-to-noise ratio high.
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