How the first solo-founder unicorn gets built(thisandthat.chat) |
How the first solo-founder unicorn gets built(thisandthat.chat) |
Two problems with that:
1. AI isn't free, and how cost-effective it is remains to be seen.
2. AI can't currently really do the full job of one person, let alone three hundred [1]. And when it is able to do the job of three hundred people, the very structure of the economy is likely to change so much that any transfer of details from the existing economy to that imagined one may well be irrelevant. In other words, at the point AI is able to do something so transformative, it's unreasonable to think that the structure of one company will be revolutionised without everything around it also being revolutionised.
It stands to reason that the economic value that one person can do with a relatively cheap tool will be similar to whatever one person could do with a relatively cheap tool at any other point in time. An increase in productivity in the presence of competition lowers the price of the product by about the same factor as the increase in productivity. People have more stuff, but not necessarily more money. A person with a laptop and a 3D printer might be a "unicorn" if they were transported back in time to 1526, but it doesn't make them a unicorn today because many other people can do that, too.
[1]: So much of the old grunt work in the knowledge economy is already automated (typing, copying, posting letters), and so three hundred people are probably doing some non-trivial work already, and replacing them means AI with much better capabilities than we have today.
Claude fingerprints are becoming easier to detect
We live in an invisible substance called air but we still know what it is
I already think valuation is a very gameable metric, so I guess you could trivially get this done if you meet a VC who will just buy you a billion dollar valuation on the belief that this is a real thing. I know some enthusiastic kids in the world I could maybe throw a thousand bucks at to buy a GPU in exchange for a millionth of their company, and technically wouldn't that make them a one-person unicorn already?
well because presumably even in that brave new world, solving the problem with AI is still not trivial, even if it requires just one person. If a potential customer wants to solve it themselves instead of buying, they would have to find the right person, invest in his time and tokens, and end up with a custom solution they'd have to support.
Also worth noting that you don't gotta do much to support software (or any solution) that only one person uses
Like, yes the main point of leverage obviously isn't software quality, but also, if AI can't cause one person to be able to solve those other problems at some scale that's currently not possible with no other human help, those problems become problems someone else could also throw the AI at. If running a business relies on having some point of market leverage over anyone who pays your business for something, the reduction of the cost of independently gaining that leverage necessarily means the reduction of the value of your business
I guess another possible means to a single-person company with a billion dollar valuation is hyperinflation
Does Mojang (Minecraft) count? Because if so, the first solo founder unicorn was made almost two decades ago.
I don’t think it counts. It was close but Notch founded Mojang and worked with others for a few years before the sale.
I think it could have counted though. I think Notch created a lot of the momentum himself.
I literally cannot believe you can get to a billion dollar valuation without at least a small sales team. AI cannot do that no matter how much you coordinate and your customers will not talk contract details with a bot.
And yes ofc Sam Altman (dude who sells tokens) thinks people should form solo companies that literally runs on the tokens he and his friends sell. That is not a tell or a signal as this article makes it out to be.
Yeah sure AI can optimize work but this ignores basic realities of running a business of that size.
Craigslist came close! and that was before AI.