Knowledge baseCommunity: First session April 9
Are you joining the first Endpoint Club session on April 9th in Breda? Share what you hope to get out of it.
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Endpoint Club onderzoekt hoe bedrijven hun eindpunten ontwerpen waar business en klant samenkomen. De community bespreekt uitdagingen rond techniek, vertrouwen en het schaalbaar leveren van expertise.
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Join for freeAre you joining the first Endpoint Club session on April 9th in Breda? Share what you hope to get out of it.
Two hours is a short window, so it helps to walk in with at least one concrete thing you want to think through, whether that's your current platform dependency, a positioning question, or just figuring out where your endpoint actually lives. Who's coming from outside Breda, and what's making the trip worth it for you?
What is the intelligent system behind the door of your business? The thing that captures your expertise and delivers it at scale. That is your endpoint. Have you started building it?
For most builders I talk to, the endpoint already exists in fragments, scattered across old proposals, client notes, frameworks they use intuitively but have never written down. The real work is not inventing something new but pulling those pieces into a system that runs without you being in the room. What does yours look like right now, even if it is rough and incomplete?
Welcome to the Endpoint Club community. Introduce yourself: what are you building and what is your endpoint?
One thing worth noting upfront: an endpoint is not just a website or a landing page, it is the layer where your identity, your offer, and your infrastructure converge into something that works without you having to be in the room. Curious to hear from everyone: are you building from scratch or retrofitting an existing business around this idea?
In the piece I talk about the business endpoint as the first point of contact a customer has with your operation. I'm curious: what does that entry point actually look like in your business right now, and does it feel seamless or more like a patchwork of tools and manual steps?
For most businesses I've seen, that entry point is less of a front door and more of a side entrance with three broken steps, which technically works but creates friction before the relationship even starts. The interesting question is whether that friction is invisible to you because you built it piece by piece over time. What was the first tool or system you added to that entry point, and has anything actually replaced it since?