Here's What Founders are Talking About on Social This Month

Welcome to The Current. This is where we gather real founder conversations to track what’s on their radar right now. This month, founders are rewriting the old scaling playbook of more hires, more tools and more grind. In its place, they’re building by removing, not adding.

3 Things Founders Talk About In Apr’ 26

  • Building inside chat apps

    Why go through the pain of building a dedicated app that nobody wants to download? Between users already having too many apps on their phones, and developers having to pay high commission fees to App Store, businesses are shifting towards Zero-UI.

     

    Instead of fighting for space on a home screen, founders are building products that live entirely inside WhatsApp or Telegram. They meet users exactly where they already are.

     

  • AI solutions now have to prove themselves in 30 days

    The “AI will change the world” phase was fun, but the “AI needs to pay for itself today” phase is much better.

    The fluff is being cut in favour of the unsexy, back-office heavy lifting, such as automated payroll reconciliation or legacy data cleaning.

    The new rule is simple: if it doesn’t show a clear ROI within a fixed period of time, and founders are saying 30 days is generous enough, it’s just noise.

  • Protecting mental health with AI

    The emotional monotony of solving the same problems at $1M that you previously solved at $10k is more common than anyone admits. And if you’re still saying yes to 50 tiny things a day, you’re not leading. You’re a bottleneck.

     

    Early stage founders are especially feeling the pain and many say they are giving AI senior ops/strategy tasks. AI has been pressure-testing decisions, designing systems and mapping what comes next for these founders since day one, so that they don’t burn out too fast.

The Reality Check

Davidson Chua

Founder of Autosave

 

Autosave is a car community platform for owners, enthusiasts, and industry players in Singapore. An early insight was realising our users don’t want to install yet another app i.e. they want to be met where they are already spending time.

So we built our product on Telegram and it became our edge. No downloads and zero onboarding means less resistance, which translates to higher conversion. A chat app also just feels more human than a mobile app, which counts for a lot when someone is making significant decisions like selling a car or engaging with fellow users.


Running a community-driven business like Autosave means lots of lead sorting, community responses, content generation, and posting at peak hours. This is where we use AI not for the flashy, cutting-edge automations you see on LinkedIn, but for removing friction from daily operations. If something is repeated every day, that’s where AI should go first.


And yes, scaling isn’t always glamorous. If something is draining your mental energy on repeat, that’s your sign to automate it. We use templates and workflows to remove decision fatigue, and I chat with AI to brainstorm ideas and map out new workflows. Burnout kills more startups than bad ideas alone – protecting your stamina is more underrated than most founders realise.

 

The Bottom Line

“Don’t automate for the sake of tech. Start with your biggest bottleneck, not the thing with the most wow factor. Lean teams win by being system-driven, not hustle-driven.”
“And never get too comfortable – always be ready to pivot, try new tools, and let go of old features.”