A 10-day email challenge
How to become a solo founder (by copying one).
You, my fellow human, would never cook for fifty guests by inventing a recipe on the spot.
You'd follow one that works. Cook it a few times. Then make it your own.
So why do people try to become founders by inventing everything from scratch?
The offer. The pricing. The contracts. The pipeline. All improvised, all at once, usually while panicking about rent.
No wonder most people never quit — or quit and flame out in six months.
There's an older, simpler way: run someone else's playbook first.
Apprentices have learned this way for centuries.
You don't design furniture on day one. You build the master's chair — again and again — until your hands know why it works. Then you build your own.
Film crews work the same way. No studio keeps a crew on payroll. They assemble the best available people per picture, make the thing, and disband. One producer, world-class output, no headcount.
That's what Hyperamplify teaches. Not theory from a book — the actual operating documents of a real one-person company. Mine.
Who am I?
I'm Keith Vaughan. I run a one-person software company from Da Nang, Vietnam. My clients are cybersecurity companies and enterprises.
I have no employees. I have a bench — senior engineers I can field in 48 hours, per project — and AI underneath doing the work of a junior team.
The client gets agency-grade delivery. I keep agency-grade margins. Solo. More about me here.
How the challenge works
For 10 weekdays, I'll email you one real document from my business every morning.
The cold email that opened an enterprise account. The proposal that closed it. The contractor agreement. The AI stack. Each one annotated, line by line, with a 30-minute task to make it yours.
At the end, you won't have notes about becoming a solo founder.
You'll have the paperwork of one.
The challenge starts every Monday.