Why You Should Come to Hatch
Let's just assume you are an AI-native person. Let me ask you a question.
What's the coolest thing you have ever built?
Maybe it's a final project for some stupid course. Maybe it's a project at a hackathon. Or maybe one weekend you used Claude Code to throw together a small demo, took a screenshot, sent it to LinkedIn, and a lot of people liked it.
And then what?
A lot of things just stop there.
So in the summer or winter, you still go look for an internship. Maybe 40 RMB an hour, doing some dog shit job. You know it's not what you want. You just don't know where else you can go.
So let me tell you something.
There are people out there willing to pay for your ability, and pay you a lot of money. But they are not in the world you are familiar with.
They are the bosses you would never get a chance to touch if you stay in school. They run a traditional company, maybe 30 people. ARR maybe a million.
Their daily job is this: people are using Excel, PDF, WeChat, some internal system, just copy and paste. They know something is wrong. They want to use AI. But they don't know how to prompt, they don't know how to find these AI-native people, and they don't trust that the consulting or the IT company will give them what they actually want.
But you. You can use Claude Code, you know how to build a frontend, you know some shit about backend, and you can build a small system in a week.
I gotta say, these two worlds have no intersection.
So what HA7CH wants to do is send you there.
It's quite hard for you to find this boss. Getting them to trust you is much harder. But this path, you don't need to walk through by yourself. We're going to lead you there. You just need to deliver and ship. That's the most familiar thing for you, right?
Okay, now let's talk more specifically.
A summer. You go to a company like this. Not remote. Literally on site. You follow their employees for a couple of days, maybe a couple of weeks, and see how they do their job. How they match a ticket. How they follow a customer. How they put the same number in four different places.
Then you go back. Or you just sit on the ground, on the floor, and give them something they can try in maybe two days. Iterate within a couple of hours.
And in the end, the boss pays you by how many people I cut. Not by what tech stack you are using.
This ticket, this shit, is much higher than finding an internship at Amazon.
What's more, you get another thing.
You get to know what the real customer is thinking. You get to know the cool feature they're not going to use. You get to know what they are willing to pay for. You get to know after you build it, whether people use it or not.
There is not a single thing about this you can learn from class.
And if this process is shared across the industry, then it's not just a single business. You use this case to knock the second door, to knock the third door. Maybe it's the start point of a SaaS. Maybe it's the entry point for your startup journey.
One more thing.
We did FDE before, and we know what it looks like. So we have a Hatch House. A place where people live, eat, code, talk shit, and drink together.
Even if you did nothing in those two months, you got to know a bunch of people just like you. Which is pretty insane. Pretty interesting, to be frank.
HA7CH is not a school. We don't teach you how to prompt. We don't need to teach you how to fine-tune. That's easy for you, right?
And we are not an outsourcing company. We are not going to pay you by function, by feature, by PRD.
HA7CH is just a path.
A summer. You go from your course homework into a real industry, finish a real delivery, get a real fucking check.
Adding one more line on your resume is so different from running a real business of your own. Those are two different things. You choose it yourself.
If you think you are this kind of person, just come to ha7ch.com.
Our first batch is running right now.
See you soon.