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Many Products Need a Community - Here’s How I Built One in 20 Minutes Using AI

For a lot of founders, a community ends up becoming the strongest part of the product. It’s where users ask questions, help each other, share builds, and stick around longer.

I needed a simple, customizable space for this — but most third-party community tools felt too heavy, too opinionated, or too limiting.

So I built my own community portal using an AI app builder. Total build time: ~20 minutes.

For anyone curious about the exact flow:

Watch the demo

The problem

Users needed a place to:

  • Ask questions and get help

  • Share what they’re building

  • Engage with each other

  • Join webinars or workshops

Discord felt too noisy, Facebook Groups felt outdated, and other hosted platforms had features I didn’t need or couldn’t easily customize.

I wanted something simple, clean, and tailored.

The solution I built

Using an AI app builder, I generated a lightweight community platform with:

  • User profiles (photo, username, bio, interests)

  • Posts with title, description, and long-form content

  • Likes + comments

  • Image/video upload

  • Event hosting (workshops, webinars, meetups)

  • A dashboard feed that updates as new content appears

It’s not flashy — but it’s functional, extendable, and actually mine.

Why this approach worked

A few things stood out:

1. Speed

The app was generated in minutes once the feature prompt was ready. No setup overhead, no weeks of backend work.

2. Flexibility

Unlike other community tools, I can modify anything: fields, workflows, UI, automations — you name it.

3. AI handles the repetitive parts

CRUD logic, routing, events, error handling… all handled automatically.

4. Easy to evolve

I can layer in onboarding, moderation tools, analytics, or private groups whenever needed — without migrating platforms.

For founders who want ownership of their community, this approach sits nicely between “build everything manually” and “rent space on someone else’s platform.”

Dropping the link for you to explore it yourself: Fuzen

Questions for Indie Hackers

(Really curious to hear your thoughts.)

  • How do you evaluate whether an AI-generated MVP is “good enough” to onboard real users, or whether it needs manual refinement first?

  • Where do you think AI-built apps fit into a long-term product strategy — temporary MVPs, permanent infrastructure, or something in between?

Open to any feedback — especially from founders who’ve built communities around their products.

on December 12, 2025
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