Getting started with ChatGPT is easy, especially since you don’t even need an account to use it. We have all the details on how to dive in right here.
Get Familiar With ChatGPT: A Beginner’s Guide to Using the Most Popular AI Chatbot
Getting started with ChatGPT is easy, especially since you don’t even need an account to use it. We have all the details on how to dive in right here.
Finding product-market fit isn’t a milestone — it’s a messy, make-or-break journey. And at TechCrunch Disrupt 2025, a founder who’s been through the fire and two investors who’ve helped startups hit escape velocity will break down how to do it right.
On the Builders Stage, Rajat Bhageria (Founder & CEO, Chef Robotics), Ann Bordetsky (Partner, NEA), and Murali Joshi (Partner, ICONIQ) join forces to unpack the most critical — and elusive — phase in a startup’s life cycle. They’ll dive into smart testing strategies, real-time iteration, and how to listen to your users without getting lost in the noise.
Don’t miss this Disrupt 2025 conversation — and don’t miss your chance to save $675. Prices rise after tomorrow, August 6, at 11:59 p.m. PT. Register now.
No more guessing — just growth
Bhageria brings the founder POV, having scaled Chef Robotics with AI-powered automation that’s now transforming food production. Bordetsky, with her background at Uber, Twitter, and now NEA, knows how to spot the kind of scrappy ingenuity that leads to breakout success. Joshi, fresh off a spot on the Forbes Midas Brink List, has helped drive $2.5B+ in investments in companies like Drata, 1Password, and Fivetran.
Together, they’ll offer a rare behind-the-scenes look at what product-market fit actually looks like — and how to know when you’ve got it.
Building a hit product starts here
Whether you’re still in prototype mode or trying to scale something that already has traction, this panel is for founders who are tired of guesswork and ready to build something customers can’t live without.
Catch it on the Builders Stage at TechCrunch Disrupt 2025, happening October 27–29 at Moscone West in San Francisco. Join 10,000+ startup and VC leaders for the most important conversation in tech. Grab your pass before tomorrow ends to save up to $675.
Techcrunch event
San Francisco
|
October 27-29, 2025
Less than a week after it became Europe’s latest unicorn, Swedish vibe coding startup Lovable is now also a centaur — a company with more than $100 million in annual recurring revenue (ARR).
Lovable took only eight months since its launch to get here, thanks to the skyrocketing popularity of its AI-powered website and app builder. The startup claims it now has more than 2.3 million active users, and last reported 180,000 paying subscribers.
With only 45 full-time employees, and 14 open positions on its careers page, that makes for an impressive employee-to-revenue ratio.
Subscriptions seem to be driving the bulk of Lovable’s revenue, but the company isn’t prioritizing sales at all costs. Shortly after Lovable said it had reached ARR of $75 million in June, its CEO Anton Osika wrote on X that Lovable had “lost $1.5 million ARR in a single day” because it had moved all users on its Team tier to its less expensive Pro tier, which now also accommodates collaboration.
The Teams plan is now being replaced by a Business tier, which sits between the Pro and custom Enterprise offerings. The new plan offers business-focused features such as self-serve, Single Sign-On (SSO), templates, private projects that won’t be visible to the entire team, and the option to opt-out from having your data be used for training.
Lovable already has a slate of large customers like Klarna, Hubspot and Photoroom, but there are still notable barriers and concerns around vibe coding among enterprises — where the big money is. This new tier could help Lovable find intermediary use cases and drive more businesses to use its tools for more than prototyping, which is what the startup says most people use it for today.
This has been one focus for the company, and Osika recently said that businesses were driving significant revenue from projects built with Lovable.
Techcrunch event
San Francisco
|
October 27-29, 2025
The startup says more than 10 million projects have been created on Lovable to date.
The $100 million ARR club isn’t large, especially in Europe, but it is growing thanks to tailwinds from all things AI. In April, Nvidia-backed B2B AI video platform Synthesia, also surpassed that milestone — though it was founded in 2017, not late 2024.
One control can bring Apple’s Visual Intelligence to more devices besides the iPhone 16 lineup.