I go solo on this episode to walk through the full list of AI trends and opportunities keeping me up at night — literally. From the one-hour company stack to ambient businesses, vertical AI, the agent economy, and the real security threats I see coming, I cover what I believe is the most asymmetric window in startup history. I share the frameworks I use to think about what to build, what to avoid, and why acting now matters more than waiting for things to settle down.
Timestamps
00:00 – Intro
01:09 – 1) The One-Hour Company Stack
02:09 – 2) Old vs. new startup timeline
03:58 – 3) Ambient businesses and autonomous companies
05:18 – 4) The agent economy timeline
07:17 – 5) Agent hiring Agents
08:01 – 6) The Vertical Agent Map
09:39 – 7) Vertical AI vs. Vertical SaaS
10:53 – 8) Boring goldmine verticals
11:40 – 9) SaaS Pricing Evolution
13:26 – 10) Seat-Based vs Outcome-Based
14:51 – 11) The SaaS graveyard
16:04 – 12) The scarcity flip
17:03 – 13) The Premium Stack
18:21 – 14) The experience economy boom
18:59 – 15) Founder-agent fit
20:32 – 16) Ghost team org chart
21:56 – 17) The micro monopoly math
24:00 – 18) Agent attack surface
25:19 – 19) Agent Injection vs Phishing
26:34 – 20) Agent permission stack
27:37 – 21) The closing window
28:46 – 22) why this window is asymmetric
29:34 – 23) Building in public
30:50 – Final Thoughts
Key Points
* I can build, launch, and get a first customer in under an hour using today’s agent engineering tools and a pre-existing audience.
* Vertical AI taps directly into labor P&L — it replaces headcount, not just software licenses — making the TAM 10x larger than vertical SaaS.
* Ambient businesses running on near-zero daily human input are early but real; the arrow of progress points here.
* The value shift I see coming: execution gets commoditized, judgment and physical presence become premium.
* Agent injection is the new phishing — and I believe it scales faster and hits harder than any phishing attack did.
* The 100 true fans model now applies in the AI age; with agents cutting costs, 100 paying customers at $500–$1,000 a month builds a real business.
Numbered Section Summaries
1. The One-Hour Company Stack I walk through how grabbing a validated idea from a tool like IdeaBrowser, vibe coding an MVP, adding Stripe, and reaching first customers now fits inside a single morning. The old 12-month runway to first revenue is gone. The constraint today is distribution, not development — which is why I keep emphasizing building an audience before you need it.
2. Ambient and Autonomous Businesses I introduce the concept of ambient businesses — operations that run with zero or very low daily human input, where agents monitor markets, identify opportunities, handle customer service, and execute. I believe these businesses will reach seven and eight figures. Most autonomous builder software today produces AI slop, but the direction is clear and the opportunity is real.
3. The Agent Economy Timeline I map three distinct eras: the App Store era (2009–2015), the API economy (2015–2024), and the agent economy I see running from 2025 to 2030. In this era, agents discover and hire other agents on the fly. I flag a startup idea I can’t stop thinking about: a Glassdoor for AI agents, a reputation layer for an agent marketplace. Gartner puts 20% of commerce as machine-to-machine by 2030.
4. Founder-Agent Fit and the Ghost Team Founder-market fit is being replaced by founder-agent fit — the ability to orchestrate a fleet of agents toward a goal, the way a film director gets performances out of actors. I describe the ghost team org chart: a two-person company with a full suite of named AI agents running sales, content, and support. As a person building a holding company, I think this model makes owning multiple AI-native businesses in adjacent niches very achievable.
5. Micro Monopoly Math and the 100 True Fans Update Kevin Kelly’s thousand true fans model shrinks to 100 in the AI age because agents cut operating costs so dramatically. I run the math: a 5,000-person niche audience, a custom app built in 48 hours, 100 customers at $50/month equals roughly $60,000 in profit for one person. Stack several of these and you have a holding company. The bottleneck is distribution, which is why building media and understanding paid acquisition matters.
The #1 tool to find startup ideas/trends – https://www.ideabrowser.com/
LCA helps Fortune 500s and fast-growing startups build their future – from Warner Music to Fortnite to Dropbox. We turn ‘what if’ into reality with AI, apps, and next-gen products https://latecheckout.agency/
The Vibe Marketer – Resources for people into vibe marketing/marketing with AI: https://www.thevibemarketer.com/
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