Vibe Coding is the new "Recording Macros."
I got off a call today with a young guy in our community, and honestly, it stopped me in my tracks. He was describing that feeling, you know the one, where you just discovered what AI can do. He was overflowing with ideas, talking about how he’s building apps he never thought possible. But then he paused and said something that really hit me: "I really want to do this the 'right' way... I just can't find anyone to show me how." Hearing that took me right back to 1998. I was sitting in a cubicle, staring at Excel. I had just discovered I could "Record a Macro" and automate my boring manual work. It felt like magic. I realized that if I was just smart enough to learn this skill, I wouldn't have to work harder, I could just build systems to do the work for me and run laps on my colleagues. Back then, it was lonely and difficult to learn these skills. The "Real Software Engineers" acted like gatekeepers. If you didn't have a Computer Science degree, they didn't want to let you into the club. My managers didn't get it either. They’d ask, "Why are you wasting time writing code? You're in Finance. Just do the spreadsheet." I had to fight for every scrap of knowledge. I had to learn in the shadows, making mistakes, breaking things, and figuring it out late at night because I believed there was a better way. Eventually, I broke through. I became one of the best developers in the field and ended up managing the very teams that used to gatekeep me. Today, I see you people doing the same thing. You have the vision. You have the hunger. You have the tools. But you're stuck in that same lonely spot I was. You're worried about breaking things. You're worried about security. You want to build legitimate, scalable businesses, but the "Real Engineers" just roll their eyes at "AI wrappers." That is exactly why I built this community. I don't want you to have to struggle in the dark for ten years like I did. I want to be the mentor I never had. We are going to take that creative spark you have and apply the discipline of professional engineering to it. We aren't just going to hack things together; we are going to build the "Right Way."