The Weekly Project Blueprint gives you the exact 5-day system and 12 ready-to-execute blueprints to build a sellable project every week — digital products, tech tools, and content businesses.
Monday: validate. Tuesday: build. Wednesday: polish. Thursday: set up sales. Friday: launch. One working product, every week. This is the operating system.
Not another "how to build a startup" theory guide. This is a repeatable operating system with 12 proven project types you can execute this week.
Every blueprint gives you the what, who, how, and how long — so you can pick one and start executing today.
If you have a list of product ideas that haven't launched, this is the system that makes the list irrelevant. You'll run out of weeks before you run out of ideas.
No subscription. No upsells. A complete build system you own forever.
The Weekly Project Blueprint is one piece of a complete AI operating system. The Bootstrap Bundle ($149) includes every guide, template pack, and playbook we've built — everything you need to build, automate, and monetize with AI agents.
No — most of the 12 blueprints require zero coding. The digital product blueprints (ebooks, template packs, prompt collections, Canva templates) use tools anyone can learn in a few hours. The tech blueprints (Chrome extensions, micro-SaaS) are designed for people with basic coding skills, but include scoping guidance so you can cut features to match your skill level. Non-technical builders will get 9 of the 12 blueprints fully accessible out of the box.
Yes — with the right scope. The system is specifically designed to prevent scope creep. Each blueprint includes realistic time estimates, and the Monday validation step forces you to confirm the product fits in a 3–5 hour Tuesday build window before you start. The goal is a minimum viable product that solves one specific problem well — not a polished masterpiece. You polish in Week 2. You ship in Week 1.
That's why Chapter 1 has the Monday validation step — it's designed to filter out ideas that won't sell before you build them. But if a product launches and doesn't get traction, Chapter 6 covers the product lifecycle framework and when to run a relaunch vs. when to move on. The portfolio model means one underperformer doesn't matter when you have 10 products — you learn, adjust, and ship the next one. Most first products underperform. Most builders who keep shipping find their winner by Week 4–6.
Each blueprint includes platform recommendations specific to that product type. Digital products typically work best on Gumroad, Lemon Squeezy, or Payhip. Tech products and SaaS tools work well on Gumroad for simple tools or with Stripe + a landing page for anything subscription-based. Content businesses (newsletters, YouTube) use platform-native monetization. Chapter 5 includes a platform comparison table with fees, features, and best-use cases so you can choose without second-guessing.
Most product guides are theory and inspiration — they tell you to "find a problem and solve it" without telling you which problems are worth solving or what to build specifically. This is a system with 12 pre-validated product categories, day-by-day execution schedules, hour estimates, tool lists, pricing guidance, and copy-paste templates. You pick a blueprint, you follow the days, you ship. The system removes the "what should I build?" paralysis that kills most product ideas before they start.
Yes — 30-day money-back guarantee, no questions asked. If you go through the blueprint and don't find it useful, email us at xlr8peptides@gmail.com and we'll refund you in full.