Embed Workflow (https://embedworkflow.com). Embeddable workflow builder for SaaS platforms. Your users design and run their own workflows inside your product.
5+ years now, bootstrapped. I still write most of the code. The product itself isn't AI, it's orchestration. Visual builder, triggers, delays, webhooks, execution logic. Some of our users do wire up AI models or agents through it, but the core is just helping non-technical people build automations for our clients product.
I'm building Embed Workflow (https://embedworkflow.com), an embeddable workflow builder for SaaS platforms. Your users design and run their own workflows inside your product.
Been at it for 5+ years, bootstrapped, small team. I'm a programmer first and still get to ship code daily. Also do demo calls every week. That's where I learn the most. Own product too and say no to features a lot. No investors either, which means nobody's breathing down our neck about growth.
Finishing up a workflow testing interface today. First time we've had one. I heard "this is industry standard! You need it" on demo calls forever, but nobody ever really pushed. Workarounds were good enough for our clients, and their users don't really care, they're mostly non-technical anyway. Regardless, the other night after putting the kids down I felt like knocking it out. I'll admit though, now that I have it... I wonder how I didn't do this earlier.
We're building an in-app workflow builder that SaaS companies embed directly into their platforms—letting their users automate processes without leaving the app.
Looking for a Support Engineer (10-15 hrs/week) to help developers integrate our product, troubleshoot issues, and shape our documentation. Technical background required—you should be comfortable reading code and understanding APIs.
Competitive hourly rate, flexible hours, real product influence. 1-2 month trial with path to grow as we do.
people want easier and if you hold a shiny object in front, most will lunge for it. Developers have been benefiting greatly for some time now. High paying jobs, no ceiling in business, praise from colleagues, respect from family, etc. Non-devs close to it now have this opportunity.
No one knows what the impact of AI code gen will be on developers. But if AI code gen under delivers and the demand on truly talented devs rise, then the ones 'doing the hard work' now and maintaining their craft by human coding will win big.
5+ years now, bootstrapped. I still write most of the code. The product itself isn't AI, it's orchestration. Visual builder, triggers, delays, webhooks, execution logic. Some of our users do wire up AI models or agents through it, but the core is just helping non-technical people build automations for our clients product.