Rocketech Software Development

Rocketech Software Development We help startups develop custom digital products from concepts to
high-quality end products.

We understand how digital technology changes the business and help our clients adjust to fast-changing market conditions. With our help, companies build innovative software products that help them improve sales, optimise digital channels, enhance marketing, and reduce maintenance costs. Being experts in various niches and business areas, we provide a wide range of services, from IT consulting and

product scaling to building digital products from scratch. On top of expert software development services, we help our clients with advanced business analytics at discovery phases and provide tech support for released products. We build and scale business-driven digital products that bring success to our clients. Our Main Tech Stack
Frontend
JavaScript, Angular, React, React Hooks, Redux, MobX, Vue.js, Vanilla.js
Backend
PHP, Python, Java, C/C++, C #, Django, Node.js, Nest.JS, .NET, Ruby, Ruby on Rails, JSON, XML, Spring Boot, Koa 2
API
REST, SOAP, JSON, WebSocket, CSV, XML, HTTPS, FTP, TLS
Mobile App Development
Swift, Objective-C, Java, Kotlin, React Native, Firebase, No-Backend
Digital Product Design
UI/UX, Mobile App Design, Web Design, Brand Identity, Illustrations

Many  , especially first-timers, are surprised when they hear that an early‑stage pitch deck gets a little over 2 minute...
05/03/2026

Many , especially first-timers, are surprised when they hear that an early‑stage pitch deck gets a little over 2 minutes of attention. It sounds harsh, but in reality, just see tons of decks, and yours is one of many this week or even today.

When they look at a huge number of decks, they get used to spotting the basics quickly:
➡️ Is there a real problem?
➡️ Is there a real market?
➡️ Is there a team that seems grounded?

While 2 minutes seems terrifying, it’s simply enough to see whether the story is clear. If your first three slides don’t land, slide 15 about your distribution strategy won’t save you.

💭 Can you pitch your idea in under 2 minutes?

💡 You can build a great product without being technical, if you understand these 5 things.We put together the 5-step pit...
03/03/2026

💡 You can build a great product without being technical, if you understand these 5 things.

We put together the 5-step pitch framework for non-tech founders going in front of investors with a hired .

1️⃣ Own the business side.
The market, the problem, the revenue model, the vision — that’s your lane. Don’t let your CTO carry it. Your pitch should be clear enough to fit one sentence: who you’re building for, what pain you’re solving, how you make money, and why now.

2️⃣ Learn just enough tech.
You don’t need to code. You need technical literacy: the ability to explain why a tech decision makes sense. Know the tradeoffs and understand what’s easy vs. what takes months. The skill actually care about is translating into business outcomes.

3️⃣ Show a real partnership.
You lead strategy, while our CTO leads tech. In the room, investors watch how you interact more than what you say. Add context to each other’s answers. Say “we,” not “I decided” or “he built.” A polished division of ownership signals a company that can actually execute.

4️⃣ Be upfront about the hire.
Investors will notice your CTO isn’t a co-founder. There’s nothing wrong with this scenario, own it. Explain why you specifically chose someone with proven experience over a generalist willing to learn on the job. A strategic hire with equity and vesting is a strength, not a red flag.

5️⃣ De-risk the technical dependency.
When asked, “What happens if your CTO leaves?”, you should have a clear answer.
➡️ Code belongs to the company.
➡️ Equity is on a vesting schedule.
➡️ Architecture is documented.
➡️ You have a hiring plan in place.
Investors want to see that the business survives beyond any single person.

🔥 Non-tech founders who win over investors don’t pretend to be technical but prove they make smart decisions, build the right team, and manage risk. And this is exactly what running a company requires.

⬇️ Full breakdown in the article. Get the link in comments.
💡 You can build a great product without being technical if you understand these 5 things.

26/02/2026
Here’s our golden collection of seemingly technical   questions (spoiler: they aren’t).📌 “Walk me through your tech stac...
24/02/2026

Here’s our golden collection of seemingly technical questions (spoiler: they aren’t).

📌 “Walk me through your tech stack.”
Translation: Do you understand why you built it this way, or did you just let your CTO pick whatever they liked on a Tuesday?

📌 “How does this scale?”
Translation: Do you know what breaks at 10,000 users, or are you about to find out in the worst possible way?

📌 “What happens if your leaves?”
Translation: Is this whole company held together by one person’s brain and a prayer?

💡 This is technical literacy. It doesn’t mean you have to sound like an engineer (or to pretend one). But you need to answer them like a who actually knows their .

❌ Bad answer:
“We use because it’s an industry standard.”
Congratulations, you successfully read the first paragraph of a blog post.

✔️ Good answer:
“We use Postgres because 60% of our customers require audit trails for . It handles that natively. Switching to would save us three weeks of setup but cost us six months of enterprise sales.”

💡 One sounds like you googled it five minutes before the meeting. The other sounds like you made an actual decision.

🔥 Investors don’t care if you can code but want to see if you really understand how to run your .

🔥 Technical literacy = knowing your numbers + knowing your tradeoffs + being able to say “we chose X because it enables Y revenue.”

💭 Can you explain your three biggest technical decisions in one sentence each, using only business reasons?

😱 34% of startups fail because of poor product-market fit.Here’s how it usually goes.Month 1: “We’re building a revoluti...
17/02/2026

😱 34% of startups fail because of poor product-market fit.

Here’s how it usually goes.

Month 1: “We’re building a revolutionary AI-powered sock organizer!”

Month 3: “We’ve got 50 beta users! They love it!”

Month 6: “Okay, 47 of them were friends and family. But the other three seem interested.”

Month 9: "We added 12 new features based on feedback! Now it also does laundry recommendations and connects to your smart fridge.”

Month 12: “We’re pivoting to B2B. Turns out consumers don’t want to pay $9.99/month to organize socks. But businesses might need enterprise sock management solutions... right?”

Month 15: Shutdown announcement on Twitter. “We’re grateful for the journey.”

💡 Irony aside, this happens more often than you think. The problem was not the ex*****on, but never testing if anyone actually needed organized socks badly enough to pay for it.

Finding your product-market fit means building something people can’t live without. Bells and whistles might come later.

✅The test is simple:
If you stopped building tomorrow, would customers riot or shrug?

📌 It’s a little reminder to be honest with yourself. Are you building what people need, or what you think is clever?

Pitching a   idea to investors as a non-tech   with a hired   requires careful preparation. “Hired CTO” is not a red fla...
15/02/2026

Pitching a idea to investors as a non-tech with a hired requires careful preparation. “Hired CTO” is not a red flag, but you need to show that you’ve built a stable, sustainable partnership with a vital member of your team.

To check that, will likely ask you specific questions. You don’t have to know all the aspects or how to implement them in code, but you absolutely have to understand the impact of each tech decision your CTO puts forward.

📌 Five Technical Questions Investors Will Ask

1️⃣ Architecture
Do customers share infrastructure (cheaper, scalable) or get separate systems (costly, secure, customizable)?
Impact: Profit margins can swing between 70% and 85%.

2️⃣ Usage and Billing
How do you track usage if you charge for it?
Impact: Accuracy affects both revenue and customer trust.

3️⃣ Data Storage
Where is customer data kept? Can you meet compliance needs like SOC 2 or EU storage rules?
Impact: Enterprise customers often demand clear answers before testing your product.

4️⃣ Dependencies
Which outside services ( , ) are critical for the startup operations or product functioning?
Impact: Fees or outages can erode profits as you scale.

5️⃣ Database Choice
Why , , or ?
Example:
“Our customers need detailed audit trails. Postgres handles this naturally. MongoDB would require custom code, slowing us down and creating compliance risks. Reliability matters more than massive scale at our current stage.”

💡 Don’t pretend to be a data analyst or infrastructure engineer. You need to show you understand business reasons (and can defend your choices) like , customer needs, or cost vs. benefit.

💭 Would you be ready for these questions if you were to meet your investors tomorrow?

Ready-made   promises speed. Launch in weeks, not months. Polished demos. Predictable pricing.But here’s what our co-fou...
13/02/2026

Ready-made promises speed. Launch in weeks, not months. Polished demos. Predictable pricing.

But here’s what our co-founder @ has watched happen dozens of times: teams choose the shortcut, then hit the ceiling right when they’re trying to grow.

In his article, Alexey breaks down the hidden costs founders don’t see coming:

🚨 you didn’t choose
🚨 vulnerabilities that appear later
🚨 The improvement tax
🚨 The ceiling

⚡ The pattern Alexey sees: speed today becomes friction tomorrow.
Vendors keep you dependent through proprietary tech, expensive customizations, and support contracts that quietly grow over time.

📖 The article covers:

✔️ When ready-made software actually makes sense
✔️ The hidden risks most founders overlook
✔️ How to protect yourself if you do buy
✔️ Why custom development isn’t always more expensive long-term

Worth a read if you’re deciding between building and buying.

Read the full article here 👇
https://rocketech.it/blog/post/why-you-dont-need-to-buy-ready-software-for-your-business

Ready‑made tools speed up launch but create long‑term constraints. Explore the hidden risks, tech stack issues, and scaling challenges founders should consider.

Hiring a CTO for your   isn’t the red flag. Not everyone is lucky enough to find a tech co-founder.While it is not a pro...
10/02/2026

Hiring a CTO for your isn’t the red flag. Not everyone is lucky enough to find a tech co-founder.

While it is not a problem itself, it may change your narrative and pitch. Investors will test whether you understand your own business and whether your is a partner, not just someone who writes code.

Here’s the checklist we give before they walk into investor meetings. If you can confidently check every box, you’re ready.

💡 Pre-pitch checklist:

✅ You can explain your architecture in business terms
✅ You understand how architecture affects profit margins
✅ Your CTO has equity with proper vesting (four-year, one-year cliff)
✅ Code ownership and documentation are formalized
✅ You've practiced handoff moments together
✅ You understand business tradeoffs of major tech decisions
✅ You know basic tech terms and use them naturally
✅ You can explain your hiring plan after funding
✅ Your CTO understands the business model
✅ You address the "hired CTO" status confidently in your pitch
✅ All contracts and legal agreements are clean
✅ You can explain what happens if your CTO leaves
✅ You have documentation that reduces dependence on one person

If anything on this list makes you pause, that’s your gap. Fix it before the meeting.
The founders who get funded thought through the risks.

💭 How many can you check off?

💸 The median   in the U.S. is $18 million.Feels unreal when you’re still debating whether to pay yourself or keep everyt...
03/02/2026

💸 The median in the U.S. is $18 million.

Feels unreal when you’re still debating whether to pay yourself or keep everything in the company account, right?

But by the time you hit Series A, you’ve already done the hard part. You proved the idea works, built something people actually want, and showed you can grow it.

📌 That $18M disappear faster than you think.
Hiring. Product. Marketing. Scaling infrastructure.
Suddenly, you’re back to watching burn rate like a hawk.

At , we’ve seen founders go from scrappy MVPs to Series A rounds and beyond. The ones who make it there chased traction first. was the next strategic step.

❓ Now, if you raised $18M tomorrow, what would be your first move? 💭

❓ Better product? Sales team? Finally taking a salary?

💭 Share in comments.

💭 You’re a non-tech founder building a  . You don’t have a technical co-founder, so you hire a  , someone with solid exp...
01/02/2026

💭 You’re a non-tech founder building a . You don’t have a technical co-founder, so you hire a , someone with solid experience, strong references, the works.

💭 Then you walk into your first meeting.
The investor asks about your . You look at your CTO. Your CTO answers. The investor’s body language shifts.

🚨 While there’s no problem with having a “hired CTO” per se, investors see potential risks connected to this scenario.

The three questions investors are really asking:
1️⃣
Is your CTO truly invested or just a well-paid contractor?
They want: Equity, full-time involvement, real partnership.

2️⃣
If your CTO leaves tomorrow, can the company survive?
What they want to see: Documentation, systems, a team that understands the code.

3️⃣
Who actually owns the intellectual property?
What they want to see: Clear legal rights to the code under the company’s name.

🚨 The bigger mistake:
Treating your CTO as a translator who “handles the tech.”
When you defer every technical question, investors assume you don’t understand your own business.

💡 You don’t have to code, of course. But expect technical literacy: enough knowledge to explain why technical decisions make business sense.

Example:
❌ “Our CTO chose Postgres because it’s better.”
✅ “We use Postgres because our customers need detailed audit trails, which it handles naturally. Reliability matters more than massive scale at our current stage.”

💡 The second answer shows you understand how technical choices impact your business outcomes.

There’s nothing wrong with hiring a CTO. It’s a standard practice. Thousands of do launch this way every day.

But if you can’t explain why your tech stack supports your business model, why your architecture affects profit margins, or what happens if your CTO leaves, investors will see that as a red flag.

💭Are you fluent in your own technical decisions?


launch this way every day.

🌟 When you’re building a  , you fall in love with your solution. The    you thought of at 2 AM. The elegant architecture...
29/01/2026

🌟 When you’re building a , you fall in love with your solution. The you thought of at 2 AM. The elegant architecture. The .

❌ But the market doesn’t care about your vision. It cares about its problems.

💡 Never skip . It’s a tedious job — research, interviews, and competitive analysis — before the exciting part begins.
But it creates the difference between building a product people tolerate and building one they can’t live without.

💡 A proper discovery phase answers the uncomfortable questions:

⚠️ Why do competitors in this fail?
If everyone else died trying to solve this, you need to know why.

⚠️ What are the actual gaps?
For example, a health-tech market might be flooded with patient record apps, but zero competitors offer real-time symptom tracking. That is your product. Not the app itself.

⚠️ Is your tech stack actually current?
In 2026, an app without automation is already obsolete. Knowing how competitors use AI tells you the baseline you need to beat.

💡 Before you write a single line of code, ask:

➡️ What products already exist in your niche?
➡️ Why do some succeed while others fail?
➡️ What gaps are competitors missing?
➡️ Which features could set your apart?

Many waste time on finding a unique idea, while real end users need their mundane problems solved.

💭 There is nothing more expensive than building the wrong thing perfectly.We see it happen more often than we’d like to ...
26/01/2026

💭 There is nothing more expensive than building the wrong thing perfectly.

We see it happen more often than we’d like to admit. A pours months of runway (and sanity) into a , obsessing over pixel-perfect and scalable architecture, only to launch to absolute silence.

🚨 It’s rarely a coding problem. Almost always, it’s an assumption problem.

Here are 6 “silent killers” that sink apps before they even take off:

⚠️ 1. Solving a “Sock Drawer” problem.
Paul Graham famously warned about this. Building an to organize sock drawers sounds clever in a pitch deck, but nobody actually wakes up at 3 AM worrying about it. If the pain isn’t urgent, the download won’t happen.

⚠️ 2. Skipping the “Neighborhood Test.”
If you’re building a food delivery startup and haven’t manually delivered food in one neighborhood first, you’re just guessing.

The fix: Validate the hypothesis before you write the code.

⚠️ 3. Buying the spaceship when needing a bicycle.
Founders love adding to make the product “appealing.” But a note-taking app doesn’t need AI voice dictation and cloud sync on Day 1. It needs to take notes. A bloated product just confuses early users.

⚠️ 4. Flying blind on goals.
“Success” isn’t a feeling; it’s a metric. If you don’t have a hard benchmark (e.g., “1,000 active users by month 6”), you can’t tell if you’re pivoting or spiraling.

⚠️ 5. The “Cover Charge” mistake.
Aggressive kills growth. Imagine walking into a party and being charged an entrance fee before you even see who’s inside. Capture the attention first. Monetize second.

⚠️ 6. Treating as a bonus.
This isn’t 2020. By 2026, AI is the baseline, not a magic trick. If your app lacks smart search or personalized recommendations, it feels outdated the moment it hits the store. It’s like launching a car without power steering.

🔥 Rocketech insight:
The goal of an is to find out if you’re building a business or just an expensive hobby. Showing off your cutting-edge comes later.

💭 Which of these traps is the hardest to spot from the inside?

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