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https://mikebifulco.com/newsletter/beyond-click-counts-good-signals-for-design-success · 3 Sep 2025
Click counts are noise. Real design success is measured in signals that show whether people actually achieved what they came to do.
https://mikebifulco.com/newsletter/stop-counting-clicks · 26 Aug 2025
Too many clicks isn't the problem. It's a signal that your design isn't successful.
https://mikebifulco.com/newsletter/optimal-stopping-problem-for-founders · 19 Aug 2025
How do you know when to stop searching and just choose? A classic bit of math offers a simple rule.
https://mikebifulco.com/newsletter/product-is-a-signal · 5 Aug 2025
My first launch failed. Years later, we sold the product - but it didn’t have to be that hard. Here’s what I’d do differently today.
https://mikebifulco.com/newsletter/what-everyone-gets-wrong-about-vibe-coding · 24 Jun 2025
Vibe coding tools like Cursor, Copilot, and Claude aren’t just about speed—they’re an opportunity to code smarter and learn faster. Here’s how I use them to sharpen my skills as an engineer.
https://mikebifulco.com/newsletter/the-quiet-room-problem · 17 Jun 2025
The same psychological forces that keep people silent in moments of crisis also show up in product development - when no one questions a flawed idea, chases hard truths in the data, or speaks up for the little guy.
https://mikebifulco.com/newsletter/eraser-or-wrecking-ball · 3 Jun 2025
The product development process is a virtuous cycle, and has a direct impact on how well your work gets done. It will also help your teammates to understand the work ahead, and to build better products harmoniously.
https://mikebifulco.com/newsletter/freedom-is-a-feature · 22 Apr 2025
Why freedom and openness in software matter more than ever. How MCP, OpenAI, and Apple’s AI fumble show that trust is built on interoperability.
https://mikebifulco.com/newsletter/steal-these-ideas-for-your-next-product · 12 Mar 2025
Pouring through an extensive list of publicly accessible APIs to find new ideas for your next product.
https://mikebifulco.com/newsletter/your-mvp-is-too-damn-big · 6 Mar 2025
Your first product version needs to be smaller than you think. Much smaller. Probably embarrassingly small.