Bengaluru: In a bid to democratise software creation, Abhijeet Kumar, Co-founder and CEO of TableSprint, describes his no-code platform as “an open-book exam” that allows anyone to create production-grade enterprise apps without programming skills.
Founded in 2024 by Kumar, Chirag Jadhav and Naga Santosh Josula, the startup is riding the wave of the vibe coding revolution — where English prompts and AI assistance replace traditional programming for rapid app development.
From six months to 10 minutes
TableSprint leverages artificial intelligence to drastically cut development timelines. “Something that used to take a year can now be done in two or three weeks. What took six months can be completed in a week. And something that took six weeks can now be built in 10 minutes,” says Kumar.
This acceleration is made possible through what Kumar calls Business Development Prompt (BDP), a process that replaces the traditional Business Requirement Document (BRD) with AI-guided prototyping and building.
From BRD to BDP
The platform enables business users to prototype apps by simply describing their needs in natural language. A ticketing system or dashboard can be developed in a week, while complex enterprise software can be rolled out in under a month.
“Even my daughter built a library app for our housing society using TableSprint,” Kumar says, illustrating how non-technical users can now create fully functional applications.
Impact on developers and industry
While AI tools like TableSprint are reducing dependency on large developer teams, Kumar insists software engineers are not becoming obsolete. “The underlying languages are still the same — Java, Node, Postgres. But prototyping is much faster now. It will impact traditional development hours, but new opportunities will emerge,” he adds.
Growing clientele and costs
The Bengaluru-based startup already counts Flipkart, Vedantu and several global banks among its enterprise clients. The platform sees 6,000–7,000 daily users and charges subscription fees starting at $19–$20 per month, along with hosting and token usage costs.
Future of vibe coding
Kumar believes vibe coding is not just a passing trend but a shift towards making AI-powered software creation accessible to all. “English is the new programming language,” he says, noting that AI will continue to simplify the journey from idea to deployment.