The One-Person Company Fantasy - Minid.net<br>July 3, 2026<br>The One-Person Company Fantasy
AI leaders are making some people imagine companies where a single CEO sits alone with a machine that builds everything. That future may be possible, but it is not very probable. The real constraint is not generation speed. It is judgment, responsibility, ethics, and the accumulated weight of decisions that make a company work.<br>I keep reading sensationalist AI headlines, many of them floating around Hacker News, about layoffs, automation, and the idea that large companies are slowly marching toward a future where workers become optional. The image behind all of this is almost comical: a CEO sitting alone in an office, maybe with a very expensive chair, asking an AI to produce everything. Product, engineering, marketing, finance, operations, support. The company as a single human plus a machine.
Is that possible? Sure. Many things are possible. It is also possible to cross the Atlantic in a rowboat if you are stubborn enough and have a flexible relationship with risk. I prefer to think in probabilities, not possibilities. Everything is possible. Not everything is probable.
The main reason I do not buy this scenario is simple: AI does not think for a human. It follows instructions. Sometimes it follows them impressively well. Sometimes it fills in the blanks with confidence and quietly builds a trap under your feet. But the important part is that the human still has to know what to ask, what to accept, what to reject, and what trade-offs are being made.
Imagine a CEO says, “I want this product.” Behind that sentence there are hundreds of decisions. What database should we use? How should the backend be structured? What do we test, and how much? What infrastructure do we need today, and what infrastructure will not punish us six months from now? What parts should be boring? What parts need flexibility? Where are we accepting technical debt, and do we actually understand the interest rate?
If the CEO does not know the answer, the AI can choose for them. That does not mean the choice is good. It may be good enough for the prompt. It may be good enough for the demo. It may even be good enough for the first customers. But if the company later needs to scale, change its business model, pass an audit, handle more traffic, support a different market, or hire a real engineering team, those early decisions may already be carved into stone.
The funny part is that even when the AI asks the “right” question, the problem does not disappear. The AI can say, “Which database do you want to use?” The CEO can say, “Give me the options.” Now what? Reading a list of options is not the same thing as having judgment. Choosing PostgreSQL, DynamoDB, MySQL, MongoDB, SQLite, or whatever the fashionable answer is this week requires context. It requires knowing what kind of failure you are willing to tolerate. It requires understanding the team you have, the team you might hire, the operational burden, the migration path, the data model, the product direction, and the business constraints.
And that is just the database. The same problem exists in testing, infrastructure, backend architecture, security, analytics, customer support, finance, hiring, positioning, pricing, legal risk, partnerships, and probably the coffee machine if the company is unlucky enough to have an office.
A company is not a pile of tasks waiting to be generated. It is a system of decisions. Some of those decisions are technical. Some are operational. Some are moral. Some are boring until they suddenly become existential.
This is where the “AI replaces everyone” story starts to smell funny. The CEO would have to stop being the CEO and become the product manager, architect, engineer, designer, marketer, finance person, support lead, legal reviewer, and internal ethics committee. Maybe there are people capable of doing that for a while. They are usually called founders, and they usually look like ghosts after a few months.
There is also a human layer that AI cannot solve: ethics and moral responsibility. A model can refuse to steal. Another model can be configured to help you steal if you wrap the request in enough euphemisms. One system may block something that another system allows. What is acceptable in ChatGPT may not be acceptable in Claude. What Gemini refuses today may change tomorrow. These differences are not moral reasoning in the human sense. They are policy, training, guardrails, incentives, and product decisions made by someone else.
So the lonely CEO is not really free. He is not sitting next to an independent moral agent. He is sitting next to a tool shaped by external rules he does not control. The AI does not know what is right or wrong. It knows what it is allowed to produce, what it has been trained to avoid, and what patterns statistically fit the conversation. That is not conscience. That is compliance with a moving target.
This does not make AI...