You Hired a Developer. Now What?
12 April, 2026
12 April, 2026
Founder forums light up with the same question every week. The framing might change slightly, but the situation is always the same:
“I finally hired a developer. They seem great. We had a good first call. But now I have no idea if they’re actually making progress. How am I supposed to know if I’m getting ripped off when I can’t read the code?”
The comments underneath are full of non‑technical founders saying the same thing back in different words. They know some things, but not enough to be confident. They’ve already paid a few invoices and still can’t tell what’s real: they don’t have a link they’re proud to show a friend, they don’t have even one user flow that feels finished, and they don’t have a clear sense of what’s coming next.
By the time a founder’s asking those questions, they’re usually locked into a real commitment: a signed contract, a deposit already sent, a timeline promised to a cofounder, investor, or early user. Walking away isn’t a simple “no thanks” anymore. It means sunk money, awkward conversations, and starting from zero with someone new.
That’s what this guide is written for.
We have a lot of clients who started getting suspicious with their developers shortly after the contract was signed.
With the kickoff call done, a project board appears somewhere in the cloud, full of tasks with reassuring names like “Set up infrastructure” and “Finalize architecture.” But on the founder side, the questions start piling up.
A lot of content covers how to find developers or what to ask before hiring, but once the work begins, the guidance gets thin. Most advice boils down to “trust the process” without explaining what a healthy process looks like from a non‑technical founder’s perspective.
It’s possible to hire a capable developer and still end up with a bad build if there’s no way to make decisions together while the work’s in motion. In practice, that looks like:
Technical fluency helps with all that, but the core needs are simpler. The team needs a way to define progress in terms of screens and flows, name risks in plain English, and adjust scope before the budget’s gone.
Many founders assume the catastrophic mistake is hiring the wrong person. That happens, but it’s less common than another scenario: thoughtful founders working with capable developers and still reaching the end of the budget without anything they’d feel comfortable putting in front of ten strangers.
Here’s how that usually plays out:
The common thread in almost every situation like this is the absence of a shared agreement on two things:
What the near term is supposed to produce in terms of user actions (“a parent can do X, Y, Z”), and
What will be dropped or downgraded the moment the plan runs into time or budget limits?
Without those, every micro‑decision defaults to “sure, let’s add that”, and the build slowly drifts away from a shippable core.
The first question worth pushing on before more work happens isn’t whether the developer’s qualified. It’s:
What will a founder be able to do inside the product in six to eight weeks that they can’t do today?
This needs to translate into something you could show on a Zoom call or in a coffee shop: a specific screen flow, not a technical milestone.
Not:
But:
That question tends to fall on deaf ears because most early project conversations happen at two levels that don’t connect.
The space between those two is where “six weeks” becomes “six months”.
Writing down a concrete, plain‑language end state forces everyone to commit to something you can literally click through together.
For example:
You can test those flows yourself. You can put them in a Loom video. You can show them to a potential investor. That’s tangible.
Once that exists on paper and both sides have agreed to it, the conversation about what’s allowed to be rough or manual in the first version becomes much easier.
Very specific tradeoffs might be:
Agreeing to that upfront protects the timeline from perfectionism that shows up as “let’s just make the admin nicer” while the core user journey still isn’t working.
The natural next question is what a founder’s supposed to do every week while the build’s in motion. The instinct’s often to either disappear and check in once a month or to sit in on every standup, trying to follow implementation details.
Both patterns tend to make outcomes worse:
A consistent weekly call with a simple, unchanging agenda gives you a middle path.
The first element of that agenda is seeing progress you can literally use.
Instead of “How did the week go?”, you ask:
You’re asking for something like:
A screen share, a staging link, or a short recorded walkthrough is enough.
If several weeks go by and the answer is always a description instead of a demo (“we’re almost done refactoring X”, “we’re close to wiring up Y”), that pattern tells you the work isn’t converting into a visible product.
The second element’s a direct conversation about risk, in plain terms.
Questions such as:
You’re looking for concrete examples, like:
Hearing “no risks” for weeks in a row is almost unheard of. Every real project has at least one risk that is likely on your dev teams radar.
The third element’s clarity on what only the founder can decide before the next call.
Developers often stall because they’re waiting on things like:
Ending every call with:
“What do you need from me in the next seven days so you’re not blocked?”
gives you a short list you can actually complete. That list is your real job between meetings.
Even with a clear near‑term goal and a regular rhythm, there are moments when something feels off. You don’t need a technical explanation to take that feeling seriously.
The patterns worth paying attention to are things you can observe directly.
Some concrete signals:
When these patterns show up, the useful move is to change the shape of the conversation, not to pretend everything’s fine.
Very concrete questions you can use:
Developers who engage with those questions directly usually come back with options: a trimmed‑down version, a simpler flow, a clear “this is possible, but we’d need to cut X”. Developers who only respond with “it’s not that simple” without alternatives are telling you that tradeoffs will always be hard to discuss.
Founders are increasingly told that AI tools will make their build faster and cheaper. Sometimes that’s accurate. It can also be a way to gloss over who’s doing the work and how maintainable the result will be.
Again, you don’t need to understand the internals of the tools. You do need clear, specific answers.
Practical questions:
These aren’t trick questions. They map directly to your future ability to:
AI can genuinely accelerate good development, but it also makes it easier for low‑quality teams to stitch together something that looks like a product until you try to change it. Early, specific questions are how you tell which camp you’re in.
Some founders eventually reach a point where the gap between what they expected and what exists is no longer possible to ignore.
Concrete signs:
The two most common reactions are:
A more effective approach starts by turning “this feels wrong” into a written, testable statement.
Very specifically:
Then request a checkpoint that matches that list.
Not a new statement of work, not a nicer Figma deck, but a URL or build where you can click through those flows, even if it’s visually rough.
Once that checkpoint exists, the options become clearer:
In each case, the aim is to protect the money and time you haven’t spent yet, rather than chasing what’s already gone.
Non‑technical founders often carry a concern that their lack of technical depth is an unavoidable disadvantage in software projects. The founders who navigate development well tend to see the situation differently, because they focus on the parts of the process only they can own.
The decisions that determine whether an early product succeeds or fails are rarely about specific libraries or frameworks. They’re about:
Those are decisions about clarity and focus rather than code.
The advantage non‑technical founders can bring is the willingness to:
Practically, that looks like:
One concrete step for any founder already mid-build is to write a short description of what they expect to be able to do in the product six to eight weeks from now and share it with the development team.
If the reply is “Yes, that’s exactly what we’re building,” followed by a plan for how it’ll show up in demos, that’s a good sign. If the reply is a long technical explanation that never quite answers the question, that’s your signal that the build needs a different kind of leadership from you.