14 Apr 2025
If you’re a SaaS founder, especially one without a technical background, one of the first major decisions you’ll face is how to build your product. Do you hire a CTO? Do you bring in freelancers? Do you outsource the whole thing?
I’ve worked with and built products for enough founders to know this: you don’t need to hire a full tech team right away. In fact, trying to do that too early can slow you down, burn your budget, and put you in hiring loops instead of getting to users and revenue.
Outsourcing your SaaS development — if done right — can give you a head start, keep your burn low, and let you focus where your attention is needed most: go-to-market (GTM), customers, and validation.
This part might ruffle some feathers, but hear me out.
You probably don’t need a full-time CTO in the very early days. What you need is a working product that solves a clear problem, and a fast feedback loop from your users. A CTO is valuable when you’re scaling, hiring engineers, building long-term infra. But pre-revenue? Pre-product-market-fit? It’s overkill.
In fact, a part-time CTO — someone you can bring in for a few hours a week to guide architecture, review code, or make high-level decisions — is often more than enough. Some founders even work with a technical advisor or fractional CTO on a retainer basis, just to keep things moving in the right direction without adding full-time cost or complexity.
Instead of rushing into a full-time tech hire, work with a product-led agency or a technical partner that understands SaaS and startup dynamics. You’ll move faster, stay lean, and make decisions based on traction, not theory
While someone else is handling the nuts and bolts of your product, you need to be out there
No product survives without a solid go-to-market strategy. I’ve seen too many founders build a beautiful app with zero plan to get users — and they end up back at square one.
Let your tech partner handle the sprints, the commits, and the infrastructure. You go handle growth.
Not all outsourcing partners are the same. Some are design-heavy and know nothing about backend infra. Some are just body shops. Some ghost you halfway.
Here’s how to check if the agency you’re about to work with actually knows their stuff:
Outsourcing doesn’t mean “out of sight.” You should still be involved in the weekly rhythm. Here’s what to look for:
If you’re getting vague updates like “we’re working on the backend” without any demos, that’s a red flag.
If you want to stay organized as the founder, you don’t need to learn GitHub or write JIRA tickets. Just set up:
These tools help you and your agency stay on the same page — and they’ll be super useful when you hand things over to your internal team later.
Even if you plan to build your own dev team later, that doesn’t mean outsourcing is a waste — you just need to plan for the handover. Here’s how:
Look, building SaaS is hard — and building too early, too big can make it even harder.
If you’re a founder in the early stage, you need to stay obsessed with your users, not tangled in technical weeds.
Outsourcing your SaaS development gives you speed, flexibility, and momentum — if you do it right.
At Beyond Labs, I’ve worked with dozens of startups in this exact stage — validating ideas, launching MVPs, scaling post-PMF. And what I’ve seen again and again is: the founders who focus on GTM early win faster. The ones who try to play CTO too soonm They burn out.
Build fast. Stay lean. Keep your focus on the right things.
And if you need help — we’re here for that.
1052 Antone Way Petaluma, CA 94952
Beyond Labs is a registered trademark of Beyond Labs, LLC. All third-party names, logos, and brands mentioned on this site are the trademarks of their respective owners. Beyond Labs, LLC is an independent entity with no endorsement, sponsorship, or affiliation with these third parties. Any use of third-party names, logos, or brands is solely for identification purposes and does not imply endorsement or partnership.
© Beyond Labs 2025 - All Rights Reserved.
Based in the USA, Supporting Teams Globally.