How to Start an AI Agent Business Today
A 30-minute screenshare where boring arbitrage ideas become cash-flowing businesses with a few prompts and a Slack webhook.
May 11thHowie Liu, co-founder of Airtable, walks through the macro case for the agent economy and then live-demos HyperAgent — a cloud-native, UX-first agent platform built for running a fleet of digital employees.
Frontier agents have crossed the threshold of true autonomous execution, and the entire gap between winners and everyone else comes down to whether you commit to 30 to 90 days of daily deliberate practice rather than one-shotting a task and giving up.
Frontier agents crossed a capability threshold roughly five months ago, shifting from AI-augmented humans to fully autonomous multi-step execution. The guest argues the real addressable market is the entire white-collar labor pool across the Western hemisphere, not Sequoia's trillion-dollar estimate. HyperAgent, built by the Airtable team, positions as the Mac to OpenClaw's Linux: cloud-native, UX-first, with skills (reusable task playbooks), rubrics (LLM-as-judge eval loops), and a command center for fleet management. The sharpest takeaway is on persistence: 99 percent of people quit after one attempt, and that gap — not capability — is the real arbitrage for whoever commits to daily practice.
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Greg frames Howie's background (Airtable, half-billion in revenue) and announces a $1M HyperAgent credit giveaway for the first 1,000 listeners.

Side-by-side chart review: software engineering at ~50%, most categories under 10%. Howie argues even 50% understates the frontier shift.

Sequoia's trillion-dollar framing; Howie argues the real TAM is all white-collar GDP, and the capability unlock happened with Opus 4.5.

Unit economics slide: AI agent at $0.25-$0.50/interaction vs human at $3-$6; 88% cost reduction. Howie tells the board memo story to reframe token cost as opportunity cost.

Gartner chart: <5% in 2025 to 40% by 2026 EOY. SaaS took 6 years to do this. Howie on OpenAI + Anthropic reaching $80B+ revenue from zero.

Visual mockup of agent command center running Customer Intel, Content Production, Competitive Research, Lead Enrichment, Inbox Triage, M&A Diligence simultaneously.

Product positioning: the Mac to OpenClaw's Linux. Cloud-native, secure by default, UX-first agent platform.

Agent researches market, validates on Reddit, does competitive analysis, builds V1 app (Blockpulse) with map, dashboard, and marketing site from a single startup idea.

App building is a commoditized feature. HyperAgent positions as the full founder: research + build + business context.

Agent uses Google Maps Street View to find billboard locations; uses images as seed for AI image and video generation.

Fleet dashboard: agent names, run counts, costs, quality scores, last run times, deploy to Slack in one click.

Skills are reusable task playbooks that give generally-intelligent models domain expertise. The Einstein analogy: give him a real estate manual and he figures it out.

Howie builds a real-time skill that researches Greg's voice, distills a style guide, and produces contrarian AI tweet drafts for X.

Positioning matrix: Codex is coding-only; OpenClaw is raw and technical; Manus and Perplexity Computer are closest comps but less fleet-scale.

Howie reads back the agent-generated Greg Isenberg voice profile: "smart friend at dinner saying the quiet part out loud."

Tweets reviewed live: too formal. Demonstrates the feedback loop for real-time skill refinement.

The tennis analogy: messy middle, daily practice, compounding. 99% of people quit after one try. The knives-vs-internet parable.

Greg on the psychological checkpoints ($1, $10K/month). Howie on committing 30/60/90 days at 30 minutes daily.

Rubric as eval framework pinned to an agent; LLM-as-judge scores outputs; trend lines on quality over time; automatic model downgrade suggestions.

Out-of-box connectors (Slack, Gmail, Notion, Granola); agent self-teaches new APIs (Twilio demo: voice and SMS service).

New onboarding: connect to existing accounts, agent learns your context, suggests relevant use cases. VC deal flow example.

$1M in HyperAgent credits; first 1,000 builders get $1,000 each.

Howie's vision: $100B companies with fewer than 5 employees built on agent fleets.
The capability is no longer the bottleneck — your operating habits are, and the gap between top-one-percent operators and everyone else is almost entirely explained by persistence and daily practice.
“The TAM for that is not even a trillion. It's probably the whole GDP of all white-collar labor, which is obviously many tens of trillions.”
“I got feedback that that was the best memo from some of our best investors that I had ever written. And I'm like, yeah, because an agent did it. And by the way, I got to do it in ten times less time.”
“Don't give up after the first shot. The agents are powerful enough to do almost anything you want. The issue is not whether it's capable. It's whether you are able to invest the time and coaching and curation to get it there.”
“When you make your first Internet dollar, no matter what it is, it rewires your brain.”
“I want to see your listener base generate a hundred billion dollars of legit companies with less than five employees.”
See every word as it's spoken — crank it to 2× and still catch all of it. The same dual-channel trick behind Amazon's Kindle + Audible.
A trillion-dollar framing is still too small. Howie Liu, the co-founder who built Airtable into a half-billion-dollar revenue business, sits down to argue that the real addressable market for AI agents is the entire white-collar labor supply of the Western hemisphere — and that the capability unlock already happened, quietly, about five months ago.
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65:04A 30-minute screenshare where boring arbitrage ideas become cash-flowing businesses with a few prompts and a Slack webhook.
May 11thAlex Finn walks through every surface of the new Hermes Desktop app and shares the session management insight that turns a $1,000/month bill into almost nothing.
June 6thGreg Isenberg and Riley Brown tear down the MCP buzzword and replace it with something actionable: agents with tools, running in a loop — with a live Notion + Glif demo to prove it.
June 23rd 2025A 54-minute live demo where Cody Schneider runs seven AI agents simultaneously to build a full GTM machine — ads, outreach, cold email, data analysis — with Greg Isenberg watching.
March 2ndA 24-minute solo breakdown of the AI experiment-loop tool that went viral — and 10 businesses you can build on top of it.
March 11thNick Vasilescu breaks down the full A-to-Z playbook for a solo AI agent business: offer, verticals, stack, and a live agent-builds-agent walkthrough.
May 12th