Two months ago Juta was a personal project. I built the first version for five people in my family using tools I had never used before because I needed something that did not exist yet.
Today it is a company with a developer, a dashboard, paying pilot families, partnerships in early conversation, and more people asking about it every week. Here is what those two months taught me.
The problem has to be real
Chad Hensle is the founder of Juta, based in San Diego, CA. He writes about aging, caregiving, and building a company from a personal need.
Simple beats clever every time
I wanted to build something with a dozen features in the first version. Dashboard analytics. Mood scoring. Streak tracking. Family coordination tools. All of it is coming. None of it was right for day one. The thing that gets families to enroll is one clear promise: your loved one gets a warm daily text. You get a quiet recap. That is it. Start there. Start simple. Start real.
Feedback is everything when you are early
The founding families who used the first rough version gave me feedback that changed the product in ways I would never have found on my own. They told me what they actually cared about. What surprised them. What felt off. Build in public, or at least build in front of real people, as early as you can stand it.
"The best product decisions come from watching someone use the thing you built and seeing their face."
Still early. Still moving fast. Thanks for being here.