Building Forward Momentum as a Developer Entrepreneur
Develpreneur: Become a Better Developer and Entrepreneur
Release Date: 03/10/2026
Develpreneur: Become a Better Developer and Entrepreneur
The dynamic visioning strategy is the missing foundation behind why so many developers and founders hit a plateau—and stay there longer than they should. Early in a business, momentum feels automatic. Ideas are exciting. Progress is visible. But eventually, that energy fades, and what replaces it isn’t always a lack of skill or opportunity—it’s a lack of clarity. That’s where the real problem begins. About Dr. Joseph Drolshagen is a business growth strategist and creator of the SMT Method™ (Subconscious Monetization Technology™), a framework designed to help...
info_outlineDevelpreneur: Become a Better Developer and Entrepreneur
The question “will AI replace developers” is everywhere right now—and it’s driving a lot of fear, confusion, and bad assumptions. While AI is clearly changing how software is built, the idea that developers will disappear misunderstands what the role actually involves. About is a veteran IT professional with nearly 20 years of experience across development, architecture, and cloud engineering. Known as a “BS detector” for the digital age, he focuses on cutting through hype and exposing where technology—and the systems around it—actually break. Through his...
info_outlineDevelpreneur: Become a Better Developer and Entrepreneur
The gap between AI hype vs reality is growing—and it’s causing more confusion than clarity for developers and businesses alike. AI is being positioned as a solution to everything, but if you’ve been in tech long enough, this pattern feels familiar. The real challenge isn’t understanding AI—it’s recognizing where hype ends, and reality begins. About is a veteran IT professional with nearly 20 years of experience across development, architecture, and cloud engineering. Known as a “BS detector” for the digital age, he focuses on cutting through hype and exposing...
info_outlineDevelpreneur: Become a Better Developer and Entrepreneur
AI system design determines whether your solution succeeds in production or fails once it leaves a controlled environment. In this part of the conversation, highlights a critical shift: building AI is no longer just about capability—it’s about control, adaptability, and governance. About Matt Soltau is the Global Director of Strategy & Operations at IntelliPaaS. He specializes in helping organizations untangle complex, legacy tech stacks so they can successfully implement secure, compliant, and scalable AI and automation solutions. With a strong focus on integration and...
info_outlineDevelpreneur: Become a Better Developer and Entrepreneur
Having a strong AI data foundation is the real starting point for any successful AI initiative, yet it’s the part most teams overlook. In our latest conversation with , one thing becomes clear early: companies are focusing too much on AI tools and not nearly enough on the systems those tools depend on. That mismatch is where most problems begin. About Matt Soltau is the Global Director of Strategy & Operations at IntelliPaaS. He specializes in helping organizations untangle complex, legacy tech stacks so they can successfully implement secure, compliant, and scalable AI...
info_outlineDevelpreneur: Become a Better Developer and Entrepreneur
Understanding why AI projects fail is critical before you invest time and money into automation. Most failures aren’t caused by bad tools—they’re caused by poor preparation, unclear goals, and broken processes that AI simply makes worse. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q4rvXGMWrtI Why AI Projects Fail Without a Clear Foundation One of the biggest reasons why these projects fail is that companies skip the basics. Common issues include: Poor data quality Undefined workflows Lack of documentation AI depends on structure. Without it, results become inconsistent and...
info_outlineDevelpreneur: Become a Better Developer and Entrepreneur
The future of developers' AI is already unfolding—and it’s not about developers being replaced. It’s about developers evolving. As AI tools take over more coding tasks, the real shift is in how developers create value. Why Coding Alone Isn’t Enough One of the biggest changes in the future of developers' AI is that coding is no longer the primary differentiator. AI can now: Generate boilerplate code Stand up projects quickly Handle repetitive tasks Developers who focus only on syntax will struggle as these capabilities become standard. Developer Skills in...
info_outlineDevelpreneur: Become a Better Developer and Entrepreneur
If you’re trying to implement AI in your business, the best advice might sound counterintuitive: start small, think big AI. Most companies rush into AI expecting transformation, but without the right foundation, they end up accelerating broken processes instead of improving them. Why AI Fails Without a Foundation There’s a growing pressure on organizations to adopt AI quickly—but most aren’t ready. Most mid-market companies: Don’t have documented processes Store data in scattered systems Lack of clarity in workflows Trying to implement a start small, think...
info_outlineDevelpreneur: Become a Better Developer and Entrepreneur
An effective ERP implementation strategy starts long before any software is selected. Most failures happen not during deployment, but during planning—when organizations rush into tools without clearly defining outcomes, aligning teams, or preparing their processes. In this episode, Dustin Domerese shifts the conversation from failure to execution. Instead of focusing on what goes wrong, he outlines what a successful ERP implementation strategy actually looks like in practice—from defining problems to managing change and delivering results in smaller, meaningful increments. If the...
info_outlineDevelpreneur: Become a Better Developer and Entrepreneur
Most ERP and CRM implementation efforts don’t fail during execution—they fail before the project even begins. In this episode, the hosts sit down with Dustin Domerese, who brings nearly two decades of experience in SAP and Microsoft consulting. Early in the conversation, a clear pattern emerges: companies jump into ERP and CRM implementation without fully understanding what these systems actually are—or what they require from the business. If you’ve ever seen a project spiral out of control, take years instead of months, or fail to deliver value after launch, the root cause...
info_outlineBuilding forward momentum isn’t about moving fast. Rather, it’s about moving intentionally — especially when transitioning from developer to entrepreneur. In Season 27 of the Building Better Developers podcast, we explore what it truly means to keep progressing when challenges, distractions, and new responsibilities threaten to slow you down.
In this episode, Andrew Stevens — software engineer, multi-time founder, CTO, and board member — shares how building forward momentum has shaped his multi-decade journey through technology and startups. Instead of focusing on overnight success, his story emphasizes sustained curiosity, disciplined execution, and constant recalibration. Over time, momentum is built layer by layer, not in dramatic bursts.
Building Forward Momentum Through Collaboration
At first, Andrew’s entrepreneurial journey didn’t begin alone. It started with collaboration.
During the early dial-up internet era, local ISPs were emerging everywhere. At that point, Andrew joined forces with two complementary partners. While he focused on writing software, one partner handled infrastructure, and another concentrated on sales and commercialization. Because each person owned a specific strength, the venture gained traction quickly.
This alignment created confidence. No single individual carried the entire burden, which reduced risk and accelerated learning.
Building forward momentum often begins with the right partnerships, not total independence.
In other words, developers don’t need to master every business function before launching something new. Clarity about strengths — and awareness of gaps — is far more powerful.
Building Forward Momentum During the Engineer-to-Founder Shift
Eventually, Andrew transitioned into more solo ventures. At that stage, the dynamic shifted dramatically.
Coding was no longer the only priority. Sales conversations, tax planning, customer communication, and financial oversight became daily responsibilities. As complexity increased, the temptation to retreat into technical work grew stronger.
Many developers stall at this point. Technical tasks feel comfortable, whereas business responsibilities feel ambiguous. Meanwhile, operational issues quietly accumulate.
Andrew openly discusses early financial mistakes and process failures. Nevertheless, those moments didn’t stop progress. Instead, they forced adjustments that strengthened the foundation.
Building forward momentum requires correction, not perfection.
Entrepreneurship rarely follows a straight line. Each misstep generates feedback, and each adjustment reinforces resilience.
Building Forward Momentum with AI as Leverage
Alongside structured execution, Andrew emphasizes the strategic use of AI.
One approach treats AI as a tool. He leverages it for rapid prototyping, static analysis, architecture critiques, and test case generation. In addition, AI significantly shortens debugging cycles, particularly when configuration issues arise.
That said, production code still demands human judgment. AI accelerates iteration, but discernment remains essential.
A second perspective positions AI as a channel. Increasingly, users ask AI systems for recommendations before making purchasing decisions. Consequently, products must be structured for discoverability within AI-driven ecosystems. Unlike traditional SEO, this requires thinking about how AI systems reference and surface information.
AI doesn’t replace disciplined builders — it amplifies their capacity.
By reducing research time and accelerating experimentation, AI expands a founder’s ability to test ideas. More testing leads to stronger building forward momentum.
Building Forward Momentum Through Structured Execution
Rather than relying on vague annual goals, Andrew breaks execution into focused horizons:
- Today
- This week
- This month
This framework creates clarity without overwhelm. At the same time, he rejects the illusion of 100% productivity. Just as engineering teams cannot operate at full capacity indefinitely, founders cannot either.
Space must be preserved for:
- Personal development
- Industry research
- Technical skill refinement
- Creative exploration
Even while serving in executive roles, Andrew continues writing code. Staying close to the craft keeps strategic decisions grounded in technical reality.
When skill development stops, momentum quietly declines.
Protecting growth time is just as important as meeting deadlines.
Building Forward Momentum Sustainably
Entrepreneurship can feel isolating. Responsibility compounds, and decisions stack up quickly.
For that reason, Andrew values trusted collaboration — including working alongside his spouse for nearly two decades. A reliable sounding board provides both stability and accountability.
Unfinished edits will always exist. Features will occasionally slip. Competing ideas will demand attention. However, building forward momentum is not about tackling everything at once. Progress comes from choosing the next meaningful step and executing it consistently.
The Real Lesson
Ultimately, building forward momentum isn’t defined by dramatic breakthroughs. It grows from sustained curiosity, strategic collaboration, structured execution, intelligent leverage of tools, and continuous personal development.
Developers stepping into entrepreneurship often expect transformation to feel explosive. In reality, momentum compounds through disciplined repetition.
Keep building.
Keep learning.
Keep adjusting.
Over time, consistent forward motion turns into lasting impact.
Stay Connected: Join the Developreneur Community
👉 Subscribe to Building Better Developers for more conversations on momentum, leadership, and growth. Whether you’re a seasoned developer or just starting, there’s always room to learn and grow together. Contact us at info@develpreneur.com with your questions, feedback, or suggestions for future episodes. Together, let’s continue exploring the exciting world of software development.