Hey friends 👋
You have the domain expertise. You have the product. You might have even used AI to vibe-code the whole thing in a weekend. But here’s where most technical founders hit a wall — not because the product is wrong, but because getting your first paying customer is a completely different skill set than building the thing. And it’s harder than it looks.
This week, we dig into Tech Timmy — Traction Lab’s name for the technical or domain-expert founder who builds first and asks “now what?” later. We talk through what makes this archetype fascinating, the cruel irony of their situation, and why the very channels they gravitate toward (SEO, Reddit, Product Hunt launches) are almost guaranteed to fail them at this stage.
Then we run three Tech Timmy scenarios through our conviction scale — a browser extension for Slack productivity, a niche inventory tool for specialty coffee roasters, and an AI cover letter generator with some genuinely alarming freemium math. One gets an enthusiastic eight. One gets a swift and unapologetic one. Cameron earns the crown.
We also coined the Conviction Chasm — the space between “we’re somewhat in” and “we’re fully in” — which is immediately more threatening than it probably needs to be.
Frivolous thoughts this week: Artemis II sent humans further from Earth than anyone has ever been, which is objectively incredible. And Cameron watched Better Off Ted.
As always, thanks for listening.
—Cameron and JDM
Timestamps
00:00 - Introduction
02:15 - The Tech Timmy: who they are and why it matters
09:15 - The cruel irony of the technical founder
12:45 - Scenario 1: Slack summarizer browser extension
28:00 - Scenario 2: Inventory tool for coffee roasters
40:00 - Scenario 3: AI cover letter generator
50:00 - Frivolous Thoughts












