From Solo to Shipped — The AI Builder Directory I Needed When I Started
Build to launch 3x faster with a builder-first home for projects, people, and practical resources.
Build to launch 3x faster with a builder-first home for projects, people, and practical resources.
Are you building something with AI? Maybe a web app, an automation workflow, a workshop, or your own newsletter?
Do you ever find yourself curious about what those you follow are actually building, but have no easy way to keep track?
That's exactly where I was a few months ago.
I remember staring at my screen, feeling like everyone else was shipping AI products left and right, while I was still stuck figuring out the basics. Building felt overwhelmingly uncertain. I thought this journey was supposed to be solo, just me, my IDE, and whatever AI assistant I could convince to help me.
But then I met a fellow builder during my first few days of building in public. We didn't just exchange pleasantries; we shared what we were building and compared our approaches. That simple exchange made everything feel lighter. A little more real. A little less alone.
It showed me something crucial: connection changes everything.
Since then, I've discovered so many brilliant builders. Some had polished products. Others shipped fast with sharp, clever ideas. And some created workflows I still have bookmarked and refer back to.
But here's what kept bugging me: every time I found someone amazing, I'd lose track. Who was building what again?
I kept thinking: "I wish I could collect them all."
Six months of writing and building has taught me two things:
- You can never be completely solo. Building is incredibly lonely, and everyone needs a few mental companions along the way.
- You don't need to reinvent everything. There's always someone out there who teaches you something new, who builds in a way that opens your eyes. And sometimes, the best thing you can do is shine a light on their work instead of trying to replicate it.
So I started working on something to help make that happen.
The Solution: A Builders Collection
The landscape has Product Hunt, Hacker News, Reddit threads, Hugging Face spaces. They're great, sometimes. But here's the pattern I noticed:
- They're all product-centric. The spotlight is always on what's launched, not who's building it.
- They're competitive by nature. Upvotes, front pages, follower counts. It's easy to get lost if you're not already established.
- They bury the new voices. If you're just starting out, you can post the most brilliant thing, and still vanish overnight.
- They're not built for ongoing discovery. I kept finding cool tools and workflows, but I couldn't keep track of the builders behind them.
That's when I realized: we don't need another leaderboard. We need a space that centers people, not just their latest drop.
So I started sketching the idea for vibecoding.builders — a minimal, builder-first platform that does exactly that.
It's not a place to collect upvotes. It's a place to collect momentum, to learn from each other, and to showcase the real work, whether it's polished, scrappy, shipped, or still in progress.
What the Platform Actually Looks Like
I kept the vision simple: a home base for discovering builders, not just their projects, but their thinking, their experiments, their vibe.
Here are the three core features:
- Builders List: A directory of creators across specialties. You can browse profiles, check out their projects, and explore their public content. It's like a who's-who of AI builders, without the gatekeeping.
- Projects List: A searchable gallery of projects, shipped or in progress. You can filter by topic, tool, or approach, and immediately see who's behind it.
- Learning Resources: A handpicked collection of the most useful, practical, and mindset-shifting articles I've come across. These are mostly newsletters or blog posts, short reads, big impact.
Each builder's profile pulls together their projects, their links, and their best content. No algorithm noise. No upvotes. Just real people and real work, surfaced clearly.
For tech folks wondering: it's built with Next.js and Supabase (using Cursor), fast, clean, and simple. The goal isn't to show off tech. It's to show off builders.
Who This Platform Is For
If you're a new builder: This is a place to discover people just a few steps ahead. By visiting their profiles and personal websites, you'll see what's possible, how they got there, and to learn from their thinking, not just their results. When you're ready, it's also a place where your voice can be heard. No follower count required. No gatekeeping.
If you're an experienced builder: You don't need more followers, you need more signal. This platform helps people who genuinely want to learn from you find your work. It's a space to be discovered not by hype, but by usefulness.
If you're just curious: Maybe you're not building yet. Maybe you're learning, exploring, or still figuring out your path. This is a collection of practical insight.
If you're all of the above: Welcome. This space is for the in-between. The "not-quite-there-yet" stage. The "trying something new." The "still figuring it out."
Join Vibe Coding Builders?
By now you might be thinking, "This sounds cool, but vibe coding? Is that really me?"
I get it. I've had friends, who are serious, technically sharp builders, laugh and say, "I'm not a vibe coder. I just build." And yet when I ask, "Do you use GitHub Copilot? Cursor? Claude Code? ChatGPT?" they smile. Of course they do.
To me, vibe coding isn't about aesthetic or trend. It's a mindset. It's about building fast, learning in public, and working with AI in whatever way feels natural and useful to you.
So let me ask you:
- Are you a builder working on something?
- Do you want to be discovered for your ideas, not your follower count?
- Do you learn best by exploring how others think, build, and share?
If yes, this platform is for you.
This is a platform. It's also a living, breathing collection of people, projects, and wisdom. It's a way to make the invisible builders visible. It's proof that we don't have to do this alone.
If you're an AI builder who wants to be featured, or you know someone who should, I'd love to hear from you.
Let's build this together.
— Jenny