Here are some examples of what people have built... most of them non-technical. Most walked out of a single session with a working prototype they've kept building since.
Describe what you want to build. Watch it get built. Deploy it live.
Alex built a complete consumer app... AI coaching features, a real backend, App Store review and all... as a solo, non-engineer founder, with Claude Code doing the heavy lifting. One person, a real product, no engineering team.
Marisol runs her own business on the side of her MBA. She described how she actually tracks clients, and built a working CRM platform around it in a single sitting. Three days later she was using it daily and planning integrations with her website and payment system -- she told me she came in having no idea any of this was possible, and left overwhelmed by the list of things she now wanted to build.
Dani knows produce supply chains deeply... and built a working inventory dashboard with vendor and buyer views, dynamic pricing, and harvest-date tracking in about an hour. Domain expertise plus AI hands is an unfair advantage.
Drop in a dataset, get an interactive dashboard with real insights.
Sam wears a sleep tracker, a training watch, and a recovery ring... and each one kept its data in its own app. He built a system that pulls all of it into one private database on his own machine, syncing automatically every morning, so he can finally ask questions across his sleep, training, and recovery instead of squinting at three dashboards.
Priya built a tool around how she actually evaluates deals -- her criteria, her market lens -- instead of bending her process around someone else's software.
Workflows, CRMs, content engines, and systems that run while you sleep.
Nora was losing most of a day each week assembling client updates from her notes and spreadsheets. She built a system that pulls everything together and drafts each update for her -- she reviews, edits, and sends. The day came back.
James came into a group workshop managing relationships across spreadsheets. He left with a CRM-style contact system organized by program -- built during the session, shaped exactly to how his team works.
A complete personal site or landing page from a single prompt. Live the same day.
Ruth had a five-figure quote in hand for her advisory firm's website. We built it together in a session instead -- her brand colors, her logo, her voice -- mostly by talking rather than typing. The thing that stuck with her wasn't the savings; it was realizing how many other "someday, when I can afford it" projects just moved into reach.
Maddie shipped her first website during her session and kept building after it. She described the shift herself: she came in intimidated, half-worried AI was coming for her job, and left feeling like it was hers to build with.
Two undergraduate founders building a campus marketplace shipped their company's page in a session... live, linkable, and theirs.
This is the classic first build... the one I recommend to every student. You already have a resume. Claude Code can turn it into a personal site you'd actually share, and you'll learn the full loop: describe, build, iterate, ship. And the first time your site pops up in the browser... that's the wow moment.
Click into the prompt and make it your own... the style you want, the sections that matter to you, the vibe. The more it sounds like you, the more the site will feel like you. Then copy it into Claude Code.
Then paste it into Claude Code. That's genuinely it.
Don't have Claude Code yet? Get set up in three steps first... takes about five minutes.
Names and identifying details have been changed to protect people's privacy. The builds, timelines, and outcomes are real.
Once you build your first thing, you start navigating the world differently... you see a problem and think, I can build a solution for that. Tell me what you do and what you wish existed, and I'll generate a personalized playbook... then walk you from install to your first live build, step by step.
Start free → Or build it with me, live →