Non-Technical Founders | Workshop | Learn How To Start Building Apps
Details
## Building Apps Without Burning Cash
Building an app doesn’t have to be expensive or complicated.
In this hands-on workshop, non-technical founders will learn how to take an app idea and turn it into something real without hiring a development team or spending a fortune.
We’ll use an AI-powered tool called Replit to build one app idea live during the session. At the same time, attendees will work on their own app ideas, step by step, alongside the speaker.
You’ll see:
- How an app goes from idea to a simple working version
- How AI can help you build faster — even if you’re not technical
- What’s possible today and what still requires a developer
- How to test an idea before investing serious time or money
This is a workshop, not a lecture. You’ll be able to ask questions as we go and get real-time help while you build.
Designed for non-technical founders and early-stage entrepreneurs who want clarity, confidence, and a practical starting point.
No fluff. No sales pitch. Just real building, together.
### Speaker Bio
Shaun Willis is Co-Founder & CEO of Boro Dev Agency and a visionary software engineer with 10 years of experience building modern applications.
He is a Replit Master Builder (Level 5) and Replit Expert (Verified by Contra), recognized for using AI-assisted development to help startups move from idea to execution quickly and affordably. Shaun was named 2024 Software Engineer of the Year (MTC) and is the founder of the almost 800-member Boro.Dev community.
He is also the founder of SwipePitch, SmartTreeQuote, and HotLeadHQ, where he applies lean, real-world product strategies to ship and scale SaaS products efficiently.
AI summary
By Meetup
Workshop for non-technical founders to build a live, AI-assisted app prototype using Replit; leave with a working version of your idea.
AI summary
By Meetup
Workshop for non-technical founders to build a live, AI-assisted app prototype using Replit; leave with a working version of your idea.
