Maciej Litwiniuk

15 Followers
29 Following
30 Posts
Plot twist in my tech journey 😁 After selling my software house prograils.com to jobandtalent.com, I'm now all in on humadroid.io - building a better way for teams to connect and thrive through HR/engagement management.
humadroid.iohttps://humadroid.io
Personal website / bloghttps://maciej.litwiniuk.net

We spent a year building HRMS software nobody wanted, pivoted to compliance, then discovered we had no idea how to write a System Description.

Got SOC 2 certified anyway.

New article about how every painful lesson became a product feature, why preliminary assessments aren't what you think, and what happens when your co-founder leaves mid-audit.

https://maciej.litwiniuk.net/posts/2025-10-24-soc2-journey/

Realization: Deliberate early wake-ups are key to nailing my goals. It's less about the early start, more about the focused intention on one task at a time. Purposeful mornings are powering progress at humadroid.io✨ #BuildingHumadroid
Taking a closer look at my landing page metrics. Though there's some traffic, it's not where I want it to be. Overlooked this before, but now I see: each feature might deserve its own spotlight page. Time to iterate for #BuildingHumadroid 🚀

Even though I'm close to wrapping up the application, my mobile version isn't quite up to par. 😕

Some elements, like announcements and slideovers, function smoothly, but others – like the user details overview – still need work. 📊

It's evident there's more to be done to ensure a user-friendly mobile view. Stay tuned as I tackle these challenges and strive for a seamless mobile version! 🌐✨ #WebDevelopment #BuildingHumadroid

This is so good. And that’s exactly what I hate in larger companies, teams or mature products. Too many things are postponed to be done when there’s a better occasion and ironically nothing gets done nor moves forward. Just do it.

https://overcast.fm/+BAW2ccInCA/29:32

How to not suck at project management — Hackers Incorporated

Most people are way too comfortable letting a project run for 12 weeks before ever getting it into a shippable state. In this episode, Adam and Ben share the strategies they use to make sure the projects they work on are shippable within the first few days, and stay shippable until the decision is made to finally cut the release.Discuss this episode on Twitter →Timestamps (00:00) - If it’s not done, it’s not done (03:54) - Example: Building an example app for Catalyst UI (07:01) - Tracer bullets (11:11) - Tactic: Thinking from the perspective of “what could I demo” (11:43) - Example: How Tuple spins up standalone demos (13:00) - Feature flagging and continuous integration (14:19) - Example: Migrating the Tailwind UI website to React and Inertia (18:30) - Tactic: Derisking projects with “save points” (19:07) - The infamous “how to build an MVP” skateboard to car analogy (20:07) - Example: Shipping the Tailwind Connect event website (29:17) - Tactic: Don’t be afraid of waste (31:41) - Tactic: Compare your work…

New humadroid.io stickers 😁
First - they look awesome. Second - somehow it’s important micro-milestone for me, when working on this side project