Founder Bootcamp

Founder · Learn · From Reality

Founder Bootcamp: 10% theory. 90% real startup work.

Most beginner founders don't fail because of bad ideas. They fail because they don't know what to do first, who to build with, and how to get real feedback from the market.

What exactly you do

Selection-based cohort. Enter with an idea — or without one.

Founder Bootcamp: 10% theory. 90% real startup work.

Founder Bootcamp

Founder Bootcamp is an intensive environment where you don't just learn about startups - you go through the actual path: from idea and validation to MVP, first users, and your next step. You can join with your own idea or enter an existing project.

What you'll move through

Idea or entry point. Validation and interviews. MVP and product build. First traction signals. Next step in the ecosystem.

Why most beginner founders get stuck

It's not about motivation. It's about lack of structure, feedback, and environment.

No clear first step

You have an idea and energy, but no clarity on what to do first - build, find a co-founder, talk to users, or pitch.

No real feedback loop

Without market feedback, founders operate in a vacuum - doing a lot, but not moving forward.

No startup environment

Building alone is slow and chaotic. Without structure, rhythm, and feedback, progress stalls.

This is not a course in the usual sense

This is a controlled startup environment. You don't consume content. You make decisions, test ideas, build, talk to users, and move forward through action.

Instead of theory -> you move through a real startup path

Instead of exercises -> you work on a real idea or project. Instead of abstract knowledge -> you get decisions and feedback. Instead of a certificate -> you leave with real outcomes.

Enter with an idea - or without one

You can join with your own idea, or enter an existing project.

What matters is not having everything figured out - but being ready to act, learn fast, and move forward.

  • your own idea is welcome
  • no idea is also okay
  • team matching is possible
  • focus on action, not perfection

What you actually do

  • How early-stage startups actually work
  • Founder mindset and execution
  • Common early mistakes
  • Where to focus first

How you can enter

I already have an idea

You want to validate it and move toward a real product.

I want to become a co-founder

You're ready to join an existing project and build together.

I need structure and momentum

You've tried before, but lacked environment, rhythm, and direction.

What participation actually feels like

This is closer to working on a startup than attending a course.

It requires focus, involvement, and regular decision-making.

working sessions

group reviews. expert feedback. progress checkpoints. team collaboration. real execution.

What you leave with

Clear startup direction

You understand what you're building and why.

MVP or working prototype

You have a real product foundation.

Market signals

You get real feedback from users or clients.

Next step in the ecosystem

You can continue through studio, acceleration, or growth tracks.

Admission is selective

We don't look for perfect candidates. We look for people who can move fast, learn fast, and operate in real conditions.

Potential

Action bias

Founder mindset

No. You can join an existing project.


Founder Bootcamp

Start your founder path

Selection-based

Cohorts launch quarterly · limited seats

  • Controlled startup environment instead of content-only course
  • Go through the actual path: idea → validation → MVP → traction
  • Enter with your own idea or join an existing project
  • Clear next step at the end — Studio, continue solo, or acceleration

Applications open on a rolling basis. We respond within a week. If the timing or fit is not right, we say so upfront.