Projects
We may not get picked today, tomorrow or the day after. In fact, the phone might never ring. But we don't have to wait around. We can decide that we will pick ourselves. Regardless of whether someone out there is listening. — We can choose to do the work, to write a new essay, paint a new canvas, build a new product.
Here's is an overview of some of the most interesting products, communities and organisations I created.
Earnest Cards
Self-knowledge and the ability to connect with other people is a skill we can build and improve like anything else.
"Earnest Cards" is an app with thoughtful questions you can use to kickstart deep conversations and personal reflections.
Download the App for AndroidOccasionaly, I share new questions on Instagram: @earnestcards.
This Website
Every aspect of this platform was crafted from scratch by me. From the design to the frontend to the API that powers the comment section.
A blog written in React (Next.js) enhanced by a Typescript API connected to a PostgreSQL database. Authentication is powered by Auth0.
Upframe (2016-2020)
My pride and joy. Upframe was my first attempt at building a scalable organisation and business model. Boostrapped from highschool.
Our aim was to help first-time founders get unstuck and to move faster with a sense of accountability. And to give them get a sense of community. The ways in which we did so changed over time, as we learned about the needs and constraints of the market.
The last iteration was a platform that enabled first-time founders to find mentors and book video calls with them right away. Akin to Calendly with a powerful people search.
We had recurring revenue, a poweful vision, a solid business model and the track record of enabling 1000+ conversations and video calls between mentors and mentees worldwide. From Portugal, to Nigeria to Pakistan. — Unfortunately, I made a lot of mistakes that led us to be in a difficult position and ultimately killed the company.
I designed the platform (UX/UI), handled the business development, product discovery and requirements engineering. Recruited and led a team of 5 people and learned a great deal about internet software, B2B, intercultural differences and product management.
351, the Portuguese Startup Community
When I organised my first conference and startup events or created my first company, I was a teenager. I didn't have the experience or network so I had to spend a lot of time and energy to make it happen.
After moving to Berlin and seeing how the rest of Europe operated, I created 351 with the goal of building a local startup scene that was more connected, inclusive and wise. Today, newcomers with energy and the right mindset can have access to key people and create the kind of impact that took me years to achieve.
Today, 351 is the largest and most active startup community in Portugal. I'm not able to claim responsability for that achievement as I'm no longer a part of it. But I'm happy something I started is still growing and producing the kind of impact than I wouldn't be able to sustain with the reliable leadership of Fernando Jardim and other volunteers.
If you want to get to know or keep up to date with the ever growing startup scene or get settled in Portugal, 351 might be a good first door for you. Join the Slack Community.
Fuzzboard.com (2020 - 2022)
This lay-off crisis brought up by Covid-19 inspired me to build a central place for startup jobs in Portugal. Until then you’d have to go through multiple sources to hear about interesting roles at Portuguese startups. They also didn't have many resources to spread the word effectively.
The project taught me distribution is often more important than the product itself. Although any developer can build a job board, there are few that would be able to do so in strong collaboration with the government agency for entrepreneurship and startups, key accelerators and the largest startup community in the country.
This year I adopted the platform to aid Casafari in helping thousands of refugees escaping the war in Ukraine get a job in Europe or remotely. In the process, I had to make many product decisions in the blink of an eye, deal with hundreads of requests, build integrations, pull all-nighters and change the scope to include the whole of Europe.
Built an API, multiple Telegram and Twitter bots, and a Slack integration. Helped 400+ people looking for a job after escaping the war. Wouldn't be able to do so without the incredible support of MongoDB and generous donations from people I don't know.
I burned out because I didn't put myself first and that was a lesson too: In order to take care of others, we need to take care of ourselves first. Fuzzboard was eventually absorbed by employukraine.org because that was the most impactful way of helping people in the long-run.