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You built it with AI. Now run it with AI. | Collector
You built it with AI. Now run it with AI.
Axios

You built it with AI. Now run it with AI.

I'm offering you four specific ways to get more out of AI: better prompting , improving AI memory , starting a business using AI and running a business using AI (tonight). Congrats! You started a business using AI . Now, you've got to run it. AI can help with that, too. The old rule: After launch, the hiring surge and spiral begins. Every hire slows the business down before it runs. The new rule: The next generation of companies will be designed before they're staffed. You can use AI agents to execute a lot of the work. You supervise outcomes, not big teams of people, until business is rolling in. Why it matters: This could be the real jobs story of the decade — perhaps even bigger than "AI takes your job." The same technology that threatens millions of existing roles can create a wave of small, profitable, lower-headcount companies that couldn't have existed five years ago. Our guess is both happen at once: an explosion of new startups alongside the destruction of millions of existing white-collar jobs. The loss will likely be more acute than the gain — at least in the short run. But if startups truly surge and operate at lower costs and higher margins, this would be a huge win. Remember the three buckets. Every business, regardless of model, breaks into them. AI will soon handle all three better, faster and cheaper than a generalist team. These buckets go beyond the research, design and analysis that AI does quite well already. The front office handles external engagement. The picture: 6:47 a.m. Monday. The AI agent has already pulled the weekend's inbound leads, enriched each from LinkedIn and their company site and drafted personalized follow-ups in your voice. By the time you open your laptop, three are flagged as worth a personal call. Your job: Review the 10 emails the agent almost sent to your top accounts. 15 minutes, not a headcount. The back office manages internal friction. The picture: A client signs. The agent triggers the onboarding packet, generates the first invoice, books the kickoff call and adds the project to your management to-do list. If something stalls, it pings Slack. Month-end books close themselves, with a memo flagging the three anomalies you actually need to look at. Your job: Design the workflow once, then only touch the exceptions. The intelligence layer is where decisions are made. The picture: Sales data and customer feedback flow into one place. Every Monday, you review real-time dashboards and you get a one-page memo: "Two power users went cold last week. Three accounts spiked. Here's what I'd test." Your job: Decide if the pattern the AI spotted actually matters to where you're taking the business. Everything described here can be done with agents that most people can utilize with a small amount of training and draft off Claude, ChatGPT and Gemini, as well as much cheaper-to-run open-source AI tools. What doesn't change: You don't lose value when machines do the work. You migrate it. You stop being a "manager of do-ers" and become an "architect of systems." The humans who win excel at the four things machines can't touch: Judgment: Knowing what's worth building, selling or shutting down. Relationships: The human-to-human trust that customers won't give a bot. Synthesis: Spotting the edge cases and knowing which are signals and which are noise. Taste: Separating "good enough to ship" from "this will embarrass us." If you consider yourself a systems architect and think we missed something, shoot Jim a note: finishline@axios.com . If you're a CEO or on a CEO's team: Ask to join Jim's new weekly Axios C-Suite newsletter.

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