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Saurabh Kumar
Sole Owner · Founder

Saurabh Kumar

Founder & Full-Stack Engineer, Codefliq

I design, build, and ship every product at Codefliq — end to end. From architecture decisions to the last pixel of UI, I own it all. This page is my honest account of why I started Codefliq, where I want to take it, and what I believe about software.

Product Thinker
End-to-end ownership
Fast Executor
Idea → shipped product
AI Enthusiast
AI-first by default
Client Partner
Long-term relationships
I started Codefliq because I was tired of seeing businesses settle for mediocre software. Every company — no matter its size — deserves a product they're proud of. That's the whole point.

— Saurabh Kumar

Vision

What I'm Building Toward

Build Things That Ship

Ideas are worthless without execution. My obsession is getting working software into users' hands quickly — then iterating relentlessly based on real feedback rather than assumptions.

AI-First, Always

Every product I build considers AI from day one — not as a feature bolted on, but as the core intelligence layer. The future belongs to software that thinks alongside the user.

Solo but Not Small

One person can build a product used by thousands. With the right architecture, the right tools, and relentless focus — constraints become an advantage, not a limitation.

India to the World

I want to prove that world-class software can be built from India — not just outsourced from here. Codefliq is my proof of concept for that belief.

Journey

The Road So Far

2016

Wrote first line of code. Never stopped.

2019

Started freelancing — built 20+ client projects across industries.

2022

Dove deep into AI/ML — integrating LLMs into full-stack products.

2024

Launched RankdResume — first SaaS product under the Codefliq umbrella.

2025

Registered Codefliq as an MSME-certified software company (UDYAM-BR-06-0062753).

2026

Expanding product suite and client base. Still writing every line.

Philosophy

How I Think About Software

Software is not just code — it's the product of decisions. Every architecture choice, every UI interaction, every API contract is a decision that either helps or hurts the person using the product. I take those decisions seriously.

I don't believe in over-engineering. The best system is the simplest one that reliably does the job. Complexity is a cost, and I try to spend it only where it earns its keep.

And finally — I ship. Not when it's perfect, but when it's good enough to learn from. The real product is the one real users are touching, not the one living in a branch.

Want to build something together?

Let's Talk