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How Product Designers Can Move Faster in the AI Era Stop Hiring. Start Deploying Agents Project Hail Mary Is the End of Traditional SaaS Actually Here? OpenClaw Is Blowing Up, But It Barely Changed Anything for Me YouMind: Finding Product Balance Through Subtraction What AI Coding Means for Product Designers 2025 Annual Summary The meaning of life The Hidden Complexity of Dark Mode Design I Love Obsidian, But We're Not Right for Each Other Building YouMind: A Year of Extension Design The Gemini 3 I See: A Different Take Why we build Audio Pod in YouMind? YouMind Startup Journey (2) YouMind iOS 1.2: Shipping Imperfect YouMind 0.5: Learn smarter. Create bolder. A Year in Calgary: Learning to Slow Down How to Research Using YouMind YouMind:The best learning AI tool for knowledge workers Introducing Haye 2.0 to everyone YouMind : A Bitter Lesson from Squirrels YouMind : The Unfinished Dream Recycling cans is really a good idea "Haye AI, the most beautiful macOS AI Chat” YouMind Startup Journey (1) Bridge, A human-centric time zone tool 2024: A Year of Turning Points Midnight Talk 11:Future in Now Midnight Talk 10 Use ChatGPT to build macOS applications without any code experience EasyDevo: The Developer Tool You Might Need My Seven Product Principles Tank 300 Review Hangzhou Restaurant Recommendations (3) Recommended Restaurants in Hangzhou (Part 1) Midnight Talk 9 Midnight Talk 8 Midnight Talk 7 Midnight Talk 6 Midnight Talk 5 Strange Bug Serbia and Bosnia Midnight Talk 4 Midnight Talk 3 Off to Sanya Vietnam - Da Nang Changsha City Grandma went to heaven My Taiwanese friend - Mr. Xue Taiwan Memory - Conversations on the Train
YouMind 1.0: The Choices We Made
CaiCai · 2026-06-03 · via CaiCai's Blog

Calling a product "1.0" is more than just bumping a version number. For us, it's a moment of internal confirmation: YouMind has reached a point where it finally feels whole. So we want to use this milestone to share some honest thoughts about the product, the team, and where we're headed.

Small Team, Real Constraints

We recently ran the numbers on our costs, and the good news is that YouMind's revenue and expenses are in a healthy place right now. But when things are healthy, that's exactly when you need to ask whether they can stay that way.

Here's the situation. Our most active users cost us far more per month than we expected. On one hand, that's great. It means people are getting real value from the product. On the other hand, we're constantly thinking about how to maintain quality while gradually bringing costs under control.

Optimizing our cost structure isn't about cutting corners. It's about staying in control of our own future. Free trials and new user experiments are expensive, and if those users don't convert, don't spread the word, and don't give us feedback, that's a direct loss for us.

This isn't a complaint. It's just the reality most startups face.

AI has changed the economics of software. The old playbook of "scale users first, monetize later" doesn't work anymore. Every conversation, every generated image costs real money. It's not just code running on a server. It's actual dollars burning in real time.

If you're a startup without deep pockets, the "burn now, profit later" model is a gamble you can't afford. You have to find a sustainable growth curve early.

So we made a choice: stop trying to serve everyone, and focus on serving the right people.

If "serving the right people" is the choice we made on the user side, then on the product side, we face a different problem. It's not that we don't know what to build. It's that we want to build too much.

AI has expanded what's possible and made everyone more productive. That makes it tempting to chase every new idea. But for a small team, the scarcest resource has never been ideas. It's time. Trying to do everything means nothing gets done well.

So when we talk about making choices, the real question is: how do we stay on the main path?

In a World of Infinite Possibilities, Guard the Main Path

Over the past month, we experimented with a new way of working. We split the team into smaller groups, each with autonomy to push their own ideas forward. It had some benefits, but it also exposed some problems.

Multiple teams exploring in parallel meant more things shipping faster. But it also meant people started losing sight of the core product and the foundation we'd built. When you're working on something new and shiny, it's easy to forget what really matters.

The most seductive thing about the AI era is that every path looks right. Every idea could be the next big thing. So we tell ourselves, "What if this one works?" But the truth is, most ideas don't pan out. And small teams don't have the resources to hedge every bet. You can spin up as many agents as you want, but individual bandwidth is still finite. If you can't think through the details of one thing, doing more things at scale is pointless.

And for the team, every new thread you spin up means one fewer person on the main path. So for us, guarding the main path starts not with deciding what to do, but with deciding what not to do.

That doesn't mean we're playing it safe. Clarity isn't a constraint. It's what lets you move fast. We're not afraid of making mistakes. What we're afraid of is making a mistake, not responding quickly, and then doubling down anyway.

I think our team has a particular rhythm. Sometimes our discussions get messy, and from the outside it might look contradictory: we want to move fast, but we also want to talk things through. Doesn't that just slow us down?

But those two things don't actually conflict. We're slow on one thing only: deciding whether to do something and what to do first. Once the direction is set, execution and course correction both happen fast. In other words, we're slow on deliberation, fast on action. Sometimes you'll see us spend weeks debating a major framework decision, then ship it in two days.

This team works hard. Seven day weeks aren't uncommon. But this team is also open. We hash things out before we move.

It's exactly this culture that makes our foundation solid. The product has its own character, its own sense of craft. That's something we can't afford to lose. Once you have that foundation, you've earned the right to talk about innovation and speed.

Subtract First, Then Go Deep

Like I said, YouMind's overall health is good. Our paid conversion rate is solid, and the foundation is stable. But here's the uncomfortable truth: even though the conversion rate looks healthy, a lot of users still aren't actually using the product. The reason? Onboarding cost. YouMind felt like a dense textbook. Too many concepts, too many steps that didn't feel natural.

A lot of people would land on YouMind, glance around, not understand it, and leave. And like I mentioned earlier, a lot of features weren't fully built out. So when you actually tried to get work done, you'd hit friction everywhere. This part doesn't work well, that part isn't as good as the competition.

So the core logic behind 1.0 is simple: YouMind is a tool first. The job of a tool is to help you get results. Everything else should feel natural, with as few obstacles as possible.

So we simplified a lot. Now when you land on the homepage, you see New Task front and center, and you can immediately choose what you want to create. An image, a slide deck, whatever. We also rebuilt the inside of a Board. We took all the old concepts (works, materials, conversations) and collapsed them into two simple ideas:

  • Task is where you create something, whether that's generating an image or doing research.
  • Files is where everything lives, whether you collected it, processed it, or created it.

Task can generate Files. Files can kick off a Task. You can get quick results or go deep into immersive creation. The new Board structure is simpler and more natural.

This redesign reinforced something we've come to believe: features aren't about quantity. It's not about having more. It's about giving the right support at the right time so users actually benefit. We've never wanted to hold back some big reveal. We'd rather stay grounded and make every part of the creation pipeline solid, one piece at a time.

And that pipeline has always followed the same model: Input → Process → Output. You bring material in (Input), you work with it inside YouMind (Process), and you take the result out (Output). 1.0 didn't change that skeleton. We just made every step smoother and more natural.

So let's walk through what's new in 1.0, step by step.

Step one: bring context in. We added more ways to connect.

  • Browser Use in the extension: Upgrade the extension to the latest version, and you can have YouMind control your browser and read page content directly. The entry point is in Add Connectors.
  • 24/7 agent access: Connect to YouMind through Telegram or the app. Talk to it, think with it, create with it, anytime, anywhere.

Step two: work inside YouMind. We simplified concepts and made creation feel natural.

  • Task templates by scenario: Click Image or Slides and you'll see templates tailored to that format, so you can jump in quickly.
  • Board upgrades: Chat became Task. Craft and materials merged into Files, with expanded file format support. Now it's a real library. You can switch freely between Task, Files, and Share, and each module goes deeper than before.
  • Switch agent models on the fly: When you create a new Task, you can switch between different agent models. We'll match you with the best option based on your membership level, and we also support Ask mode.
  • In-Task creation: After you generate an image or slide, you can open it and edit it right inside the Task (works for images, slides, webpages, and more). You can also view all your outputs in one place and save them to Files with one click.

Step three: take results out. We made it easier to share and distribute what you create.

  • Share slides directly: Once you finish a slide deck, you can share a link. That link can also serve as a presentation entry point, with direct access to presentation mode.
  • Turn your process into a Skill: You can package your creative methods into a Skill, showcase it, even create a paid Skill and participate in creator rewards.

When all three steps work together, YouMind becomes a true loop: things come in, get processed, and go out.

The Long Road Ahead

Coming back to 1.0. After all the specific changes, the most fundamental thing is that I've figured out what I want YouMind to become. I've settled on four words: beautiful, useful, sellable, playful.

They sound simple, but actually doing all four is hard. And for me, these four words are a complete set. You can't drop one. They're the yardstick I use to measure whether we're doing this right.

"Beautiful" is the first gate. I mentioned onboarding cost earlier. Well, beauty is the first part of onboarding cost. Whether a user feels comfortable in the first three seconds often decides whether they'll give you a second chance. We'll look at a corner radius or a bit of whitespace over and over again. It's not OCD. It's because that first glance is expensive. If they're drawn in, everything else gets a chance to happen.

But if it's only beautiful, it's just a vase. So "useful" is the foundation. That's what keeps people around. To be honest, today's YouMind is still fighting to nail both "beautiful" and "useful." We're hoping that with 1.0, we can push these two foundational pieces forward and actually build a tool that helps creators produce real value.

Once you have that foundation, you can talk about "sellable." Sellable isn't something we decide on our own. It's whether users, from their side, recognize the value. This isn't wishful thinking. It has to land in reality, and users vote with their choices.

Finally, "playful" is what we're aiming for in the future. For a tool to stay alive over the long term, I don't think solving problems or delivering value is enough. At its core, it has to be playful. Something people want to keep exploring, something they genuinely see as a long-term creative partner.

Like the title says, the road is long. To be honest, by our own standards, we're probably just passing this year. Our goal is to hit 80 points by 2026. And that 80 means real value delivered, the kind the market actually recognizes.

The reason we're sharing all of this so openly is because we believe that even in the AI era, building a product still means passing your own test. Speed can change, but the standard of "making something we're proud to put out there"? That's not changing. We really hope YouMind is something we build together with all of you. So as the people behind it, we want to share what we're thinking, what we're doing, and where we are right now.

We hope this honesty and commitment lives up to your trust.

CPO of YouMind

CaiCai