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Category: Entrepreneurship and AI
Tags: AI-driven BusinessAutomation and AIBusiness InnovationSolo EntrepreneurshipStartup Strategy
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Sam Alman says that there's going to be a oneperson soloreneur billiondoll company over the next few years now. Ever since I heard him say this, it's been stuck in my head.
Is it actually possible? Can you have one person come up with a billiondoll company?
I mean,
00:17
it's the dream, but is it possible? Um, today's episode is about completely unpacking that.
Uh, figuring out is it worth it? How you can structure your company so that you can create a billion-dollar outcome?
how how do you can create AI agents to actually go and
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do that? Is this actually possible?
Um, and it's just my my thinking about, you know, this whole thing. If I was going to start a billion-doll soloreneur business, how would I structure my my business today?
And I'm going to explain everything from top to bottom. So, this
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is a completely free episode. People charge thousands of dollars for this.
This is free. um because I hope it inspires one of you to go and start something hopefully a billion dollar solo business.
[Music]
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>> The quote that Sam Alman says is we're going to see 10erson companies with billion dollar valuations pretty soon. my in my little group chat with my tech CEO friends, there's this betting pool for the first year there was a oneperson billiondoll company which would have
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been unimaginable without AI and now it will happen. Um that quote used to sound insane.
Uh today it sounds like it's possible. It sounds like it could be next quarter and I'm going to explain why.
Um, when you think about a AI first
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company versus a traditional company and now we're creating AI first companies, you basically have a founder that manages a bunch of agents that do tasks. Um, now even in Sam Alman's statement, he mentions that we're going to see 10
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person companies with billion-dollar valuations pretty soon. Uh, he doesn't say he doesn't say this, but I think we're going to see that sooner and then we're going to see the one person billion dollar company.
And the reason why he's he's he's saying that is because, you know, some of these will
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could become people like you might not want to hire create a creator agent. You might want to hire hire a creator or you might want to hire a person that manages some of these agents.
And by the way, if you stick around to the end of this video, I'm going to be an episode I'm going to be sharing exactly how I would
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structure a company. But yeah, AI first company.
Um, and then a traditional company is just people managing people. So you have an executive team, VP sales manages uh the sales team, the VP marketing man uh manages the marketing team, the VP engineering manage the
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engineering team. So this is like a mindset uh shift when you're you're starting your business.
Um and Sam Alman actually says himself, he says the future of startups could just be one person and 10,000 GPUs. So
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what he means by that is you know there's a lot of compute that is going to be powering the outcomes of these agents. Now the old way of building a company a startup is you would come up with an idea you'd write it on a napkin.
Then
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you'd go and fund raise. Maybe that's friends and family.
Maybe that's venture capital. You'd hire people.
You'd build the product. You'd launch the product.
Hopefully it worked. Hopefully hopefully people bought it.
And then you'd scale it. And that's what you would do.
And it would and it would take time and it was
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also you know not everyone had you know wealthy friends to hire uh to to raise money from and not everyone lived in San Francisco. So the new path is a bit different and I haven't seen anyone uh you know summarize this new path in this
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way. So let me know if this resonates with you all.
So the first thing you do is you start with an audience. So, you actually go and start a Twitter account, an Instagram, a Tik Tok, and then you vibe code uh something for that audience.
You launch it. Um, and then
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you build more of a community than an audience. So, over time, as you're building an audience, you're trying to build this community, a private community or, you know, IRL events, just hardcore people who love your brand and what you're doing.
And then you build,
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you know, you use AI agents for automating a lot of the work and then you go and repeat. So this is the old path.
This is the new path. I'm going to give you an example of uh of how you can do the new path.
Um and I'm going to use myself as an example just because um you know it's
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it's the easiest example to give. I'm just talking about myself here.
So uh before I started you know a lot of you all know ideouser.com which is I give this you know free startup idea of the day um on this platform but a lot of
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people don't know that it started off by me just tweeting startup ideas. So if you think about my account, I just tweet about startup ideas.
People started I noticed that people like them. So I built a you know I vibecoded uh using cursor mostly uh this product called
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ideabouser.com. I also built a community for it called startup empire which is a private community and now I've gone and automated a lot of this here.
Now there is humans in the loop. The idea browser team is three people including myself.
So, it's not a oneperson billion-dollar
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company, but it just goes to show you that if you have an idea for something, just start a X account or an Instagram account. And then from there, you can learn about what people like, learn about the different formats that work.
You know, it took me a while to get to this format and then you can, you know,
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build that community and start automating it uh over time. Sam Alman, the co-founder of OpenAI, just said that it is the era of the idea guy, and he is not wrong.
I think that right now is an incredible time to be building a
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startup. And if you listen to this podcast, chances are you think so, too.
Now, I think that you can look at trends uh to basically figure out uh what are the startup ideas you should be building. So, that's exactly why I built ideaser.com.
Every single day you're
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going to get a free startup idea in your inbox and it's all backed by high quality data trends. How we do it?
People always ask. We use AI agents to go and search what are people looking for and what are they screaming for in
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terms of products that you should be building and then we hand it on a you know silver platter for you to go check out. Um we do have a few paid plans that you know take it to the next level.
uh give you more ideas, give you more AI agents and more almost like a chat GBT
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for ideas with it, but you can start for free ideabrows.com. And if you're listening to this, I highly recommend it.
So that's the new path. Um I think another interesting thing about this era that we're in is um and I just want to I want
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to mention this every uh new era that we've been in 1990s with the computer revolution 2000's cloud revolution mobile and SAS revolution in the 2010s brought it more leverage. So what what's happened is um it's just been quicker to
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launch things and you can get to bigger outcomes uh through uh with the smaller teams. So, um that's just something to know about this era that we're in.
Um and I, you know, we should also talk about like why this is happening. Like why is it actually possible for you to
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go and start a business that could could potentially be a billion dollars. Um and I narrowed it down to these five mega trends.
So one is that uh you know for the first time ever services are becoming software. It used to be software as a service SAS.
Um but now uh
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with AI agents actually having the ability to fulfill uh the the service. So let's say instead of hiring a social media manager, you're hiring an AI agent that does the social media managing.
Instead of hiring a copywriter, you're hiring a a a
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copywriter AI agent that goes and fulfills it. And that's the business, right?
you the person listening to this are going to could go and actually go and create that as an AI agent and then charge hundreds of dollars or tens of dollars a month for it. So this is
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completely unlocked a whole new set of um of uh of businesses. Second is that there's instant distribution.
So you can go and you know start an ex account or an Instagram build followings or if you
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don't want to do that and that's not your style you can also just partner with existing creators and get instant distribution. Um we're also you know this era we're in we're built on top of the shoulders of giants.
So you can go and integrate with open AAI you can go and start a Shopify these tools exist.
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You can go and use superbase. You can go and use netlifi.
You can go and use all these different tools. Um, and of course you have to pay to use these tools, but you know, you're accessing billions of dollars of R&D uh with a flick of a button.
I also think that there's this
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new trust in small brands. You know, there's this new trend, you know, shop local, right?
Like it's almost like people want indie hackers and indie startups to win. I think that's a big reason why Peter levels and people like him.
People are you know they want to buy his products and services because
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they feel like uh you know I'd rather buy it from him than buy it from Mark Zuckerberg or whoever. And then the last thing is that there's these high precision ad platforms for the first time ever.
Um and it's not just Meta, it's uh you know Google, it's Tik Tok.
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Um you know X is starting to get uh quite good at it. Um so you know you could with the right offer you can access people and they'll buy your service and then you as you know the person who wants to go and create a billion dollar
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oneperson business uh your core skills are going to be code leverage audience leverage and capital leverage. So I think it was Naval who who talked about this.
Um so you know you want you know you can there's only three ways in in this world where you can get leverage.
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in this world you can get leverage is through code and through audience and through capital. So you you know you are trying to refine these things as much as possible.
Of course you you might not be the best developer but you need you want to understand it and you want to you know surround yourself with the right um
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you know products and agents that go and help create uh the best code. You you know you might want to get really good at audience building and thinking about what sort of formats are working etc etc.
And then capital as you know is something that you build up over time. So you might be thinking okay great I
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kind of buy that there might be this opportunity to build a billion dollar oneperson business but how do I actually get started? And you know if I were just getting started this is this is what I would do.
I would start as a freelancer in something. So I would be like maybe I'm a visual designer.
I'm a I'm a I'm a
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product designer. I I design apps, mobile apps, let's say, and then I uh I create a productized service around it and I say, you know, for $5,000, I will design your your mobile app, five screens or less.
And then you get an
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idea for a microsass. And I did a whole EPO uh I did a whole episode around Microsass and how to start one.
I can link it in the description if you're interested in that. But it's basically this idea.
What is the one feature that you can create that you can sell to people? um that's a software um and then
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you have AI agents fulfill the actual outcome and that's the uh that's the way that you know you progress through your soloreneur journey and while you're doing it uh you're building an audience so you you're thinking about how I could you know you know what niche you want to
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be what micro niche you want to be and you're getting better at it you're getting more followers uh every single day you're committing to actually posting and that could be you know, you could have AI agents help you in that, but you're committing to the game of building an audience. And, you know, I
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put this over here. I saw this uh really good, you know, 100 proven hooks.
I think uh the Twitter account it came from is a guy named Marada. And he just like summarized like the hundred just hooks that work like POV, you just found the the app that replaced your therapist
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or this is why your screen time is actually 11 hours or your parents don't know about this money hack. So, you know, while you're getting really good at your fulfillment, you have to get really good at your audience development, too.
Like, you this you have to live and breathe this. And I think that's a big part of what will
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make a successful $1 billion uh business. So, if you want to think about your org chart a little bit, like this is potentially what it could be.
So, you're over here, you're the solo founder, and then you have these LLMs that basically manage these agents. So
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you have engineering agents which is code generation, testing, QA, DevOps, deploying. You have design agents, UIUX creation, brand assets.
You have marketing agents which are content creation, SEO, SEM, social media. You have sales agents which are lead
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qualifications, outreach, demo booking. You have support agents, which is ticket triage, documentation, and then you'll have data analyst agents.
So, it's this whole idea around you're creating this hierarchy and you're going to have a bunch of agents fulfill it. And like I
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said in the beginning, you might have people do some of this uh in the beginning like UIUX, you might outsource to a person. Um you might outsource this to a small design agency.
Um but over time, the the idea is to basically have this all fulfilled by super
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intelligence. Um, so that way you can go be on your beach and you know things are just working and you don't have to deal with people.
Um, and then the way this works like actually tangibly like you can think of
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like real here's like real time agent activity, right? So imagine you have on your team you have a researcher, a creator, an analyst, an operator and strategist.
So basically uh the researcher is feeding data, the creator is generating content, the analyst is processing metrics, the operator is
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handling tasks, the strategist is making decisions that goes into a central database. And you basically have this productivity gain that you g you gain from having these uh agents work for you 24/7.
And this is what Sam was basically talking about. I think, you know, I
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can't I can't read his mind, but I think that he he's thinking about like there is this world where you're going to have agents fulfilling these these these tasks. Now, when I was thinking about this, I was like, there's obviously a world
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where this goes, you know, horribly wrong. And, you know, I wanted to just make mention that this is this is how it could go wrong, right?
So like you can create something and then you overautomate something and it loses the human touch
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and then your business goes down. Like you you know it might cap out at 100k or 300k or something and then it'll just just not work right.
So um you know you could have uh bad documentation your agents could produce garbage. You can
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have bad quality control and then you you know you have mistakes. You don't have a customer contact and then you lose connection.
But I think that, you know, the person that's going to end up creating this billion dollar oneperson company is just going to like all these things are going to be extremely dialed.
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All the the rules are going to be uh dialed. All the references are going to be completely dialed.
The the output of all this is going to be as good if not better than a human being. And as the models get better over time, um that'll be easier.
So now you have to put a lot
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more work into actually feeding context continuously giving these rules. But I think over time they'll just get better just like human beings.
you know, if you have a smart person on your team, um, let's say in social media, even if they, you know, they they join and they only
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have one year of experience, but after year two and three and they see what works and the metrics are being fed into them and they understand feedback loops and they're hard workings and their goals, you know, they've got goals, then uh, over time, you know, some of my best employees have been younger people
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who've just learned really quickly. So, I think that's uh that's just something to to call out.
The other thing I wanted to call out, I saw this tweet uh today that uh is this guy named Mark Lou. He's so soloreneur
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and he says, "How long did it take my little SAS to grow? Uh 1K MR, 2K MR, 3, 4.
So 1K took four months, 2K took 3 months, 3K took two months, and 4K took one month." And this guy has like an audience of like hundreds of thousands
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or hundred. Yeah, I think it's hundreds of thousands.
So, it takes time and it's not easy. I I don't want to sugarcoat it.
Like, it's not easy. It takes time.
So, I do think that whoever is going to come up with this billion dollar, you know, oneperson thing. Um, it might look
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something like this. Like the curve might be slow and then, you know, suddenly all at once.
I put together a 2 by two matrix uh to just show how like where the opportunity is to create
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agents that do work for people that you can charge money for. Um so on the y- axis you have the value.
So like obviously you want as much value as possible and on the x-axis is you want is you want repetition. You want as much repetition as possible.
So, if you're
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selling social media management as an agent, you want the the customer that you're selling to to want to do that multiple times a day because if it's high repetition and it's high value, then that's where the gold mine is. So, this is where, you know, you want to
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this is kind of the sweet spot. You want to be here.
Um, and you obviously don't want to be here. You don't want to have something that's low value and not really repetitive because then it'll be hard to sell.
you're coming up with ideas for things. Think about think about it like that.
And then by the way,
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from I saw this uh episode I thought it was a good episode around um on Lenny's podcast uh around choosing the right AI pricing archetype. I also think that there's opport you know thinking about how to actually price your AI agent
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business on one person business. Um you know is it going to be usagebased pricing?
So what does that mean? Pay for what you consume.
Is it going to be outcome based pricing? You know, the win-win model, so per outcome.
So, for example, uh Finn, I think, is like a a
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app from Intercom. And I'm pretty sure that it's a customer support agent that you know, you implement on your website and if it works like it res there's a resolution that happens uh with a customer, you get charged some amount of
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money. um seatbased which is Slack, Figma, Grammarly.
I think this is going to be less and less common. Um I think the more interesting ones are going to be something like usage base and outcome based like there's an opportunity to if you're building your one person billion
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dollar company to think to do something more like usage based and outcome based because this is a new type of model that you can you know that uh you know you could have done it before without AI but it's it's way easier to do now or you can think about a hybrid pricing model. So the base fee and consumption.
So as
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you're thinking about pricing, this is the way to think about it. I tend to think that the usage based pricing and outcome based pricing is the most uh fastest way to to a billion.
There's two more things I want to cover. Um not every business can be built like
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a one person billion dollar founder business. So let's talk about the ones that can and the ones that can't.
So if it's a digital product, yes, it can. If it's not a digital product, then you're going to need human labor.
So obviously it's not going to be a oneperson business. Uh if it's B2B SAS or consumer
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app like a mobile app, um yes, it could it could be a billion dollar business, but if it's a complex B2B uh app or B2B SAS, um you're going to need a sales team. Um so you you probably don't want to do that.
Um, and
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when I'm talking about that, I'm talking about like a healthcare company, you know, a defense company, education, uh, you know, selling into the Fortune 500, you do need sales teams. Um, can AI handle the core value?
Um,
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you know, if there's some you we're at at the stage right now that that might not be possible for everything. So thinking about uh the one you know the business that you're going to start think about the ones that it's actually possible today.
For example, social media management. You can actually get
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it done that it researches uh it manages it and and it's able to create the content in a pretty good way that it adds value. So if not, you're going to need human specialists and then you can't be a oneperson business.
Uh regulatory requirements. Um if there's
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heavy uh regulatory requirements, you're going to need compliance. I'm talking fintech.
I'm talking healthcare. Um, but if there's light or none, you're you're Gucci.
And then, uh, network effects. You're going to want to start a oneperson business with network effects.
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If you don't think that it's possible that there's network effects, it's going to be possible, but I think it's going to just be extremely hard. Um, if you do have network effects in some capacity, I think it'll be a lot easier.
To conclude, is the $1 billion solo
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founder possible? Here's here's where I netted out on it.
Technically, yes. Um, AI provides the leverage.
So, if you have the right product, the right marketing, the right timing, the right person, um, the first solo unicorn is
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probably coming in 2026 to 2028. I think the 10 person 1 billion dollar company is probably coming uh, you know, sooner than that.
um well two you know it's probably being built right now uh but you know so yes it's possible
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practically though it does require these per perfect conditions and I think that in the future as AI keeps improving um it'll just be easier to actually do this um so I think it's totally possible
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I think right now it's quite extremely extremely extremely rare um but the fact that it's even possible uh is absolutely cool. Um
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and it fires me up. I mean, you know, this has never been possible in history that you've been able to um go and actually uh potentially start a oneperson business that is worth $1 billion.
So
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for all of you listen who made it to the end uh let me know if this you know these little education episodes are interesting to you like this one or the microsass episode. Um my goal is to teach you um about a particular topic that I'm thinking about in real time and
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um I can't wait to see the either one person billion dollar company that you create or the 10 billion dollar company you create. Um, I'll keep sharing these videos and episodes for free so that you can enjoy them.
Create something cool. And if you need a startup idea, you know
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where to find them. Ideabrowser.com or continue listening to this podcast um the startup ideas podcast.
And I will see you in the uh YouTube comments. I read every single one.
Um, and please
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let me know what you would like me to cover uh next. Um, Micros was the first one in this educational style.
This time it's the oneperson billion-dollar company. What would you like next?
Um, because I want to cover the things that you care about and that you're trying to learn uh as fast as possible. Happy
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building and have a creative day.