Ask HN: How would you build a dev/design agency in 2025 alongside AI?
11 points by SouravInsights a day ago | 6 comments
I’m a developer and have worked remotely for 3-4 years with various product based companies like rabbithole.gg, paragraph.xyz, pimlico.io etc and for the past few months I’ve been working on a side-project of my own, it’s an open-source form builder platform like Typeform. Through my journey, I've discovered I really enjoy the craft of building products & open source softwares. It got me thinking about starting a small dev/design agency, but with a different approach.
The landscape today has changed dramatically. We all know AI is getting really good at churning out basic code and MVPs. But I still believe there's real value in human creativity and understanding the deeper nuances of building great products.
Here's what I'm thinking: 1. Keep it small and focused (just 3-4 of us) - engineers and designers who genuinely care about building great stuff 2. Take on meaningful client work while building our own products 3. Get involved in open source and build useful tools for the community 4. Keep working on our own products (starting with my form builder)
What I'm inspired by: 1. 37signals: Started as a web design agency, created Basecamp, and eventually built Hey.com 2. überdosis: Built products for clients and worked on an open source text editor called TipTap (tiptap.dev) which is now their primary focus
What I want to avoid: 1. Becoming yet another "digital transformation" agency (you know the type) 2. Racing to the bottom against AI-generated MVPs 3. The typical agency trap of scaling up with juniors and PMs 4. Saying yes to every project that comes along
Some things I keep wondering about: 1. How would you position an agency today with AI in the picture? 2. Anyone here managed to build their own products while running client work? 3. What kind of work should we focus on that AI won't easily replace? 4. Has anyone grown their agency through open source work?
Really want to hear from folks who: 1. Have built small but solid agencies 2. Are actually using AI in their dev workflow (not just talking about it) 3. Have juggled client work with building products 4. Have grown through open source
andyish a day ago | next |
You've laid out the dream for a lot of developers around the world.
Agency life is probably 80% sales and 20% delivery. The agency pattern you've mentioned is common because it consistently works and everyone (myself included) fawns over the basecamp model but they're about the only ones who've made it work.
AI-generated SaaS tools just remind me of white-label SaaS products that were the hot thing however many years ago. They do about 50% of what the customer wants and a PITA to customize.
Having said that if I started again I'd still build one or more AI-centric B2B products with a focus on closed AI systems and look for agency work (ad-hoc development) as an offshoot.
You'd be able to build up a client base with your B2B products and have tangible examples to demonstrate what you're capable of while playing on the fact that the client's data is secure and never shared with third parties.