Here's a fun thought experiment: What if you could be 100 times more productive at work? Not 10% better after reading some productivity blog, but literally 100 times more effective. According to Reddit Inc. (RDDT) co-founder Alexis Ohanian, that's not science fiction anymore. It's where we're headed, and OpenAI's Sam Altman convinced him of it back in 2023.
The One-Person Billion-Dollar Company
The conversation kicked off when 20VC founder Harry Stebbings shared insights from a discussion with Turing CEO Jonathan Siddharth about AI's impact on the future of work. Stebbings made a bold claim on X: if AI makes everyone 100 times more productive, he could run 100 companies instead of just one. And Tesla Inc. (TSLA), SpaceX, and xAI CEO Elon Musk? He could theoretically juggle several hundred.
Ohanian jumped in to say he "strongly agrees," pointing back to an October 2023 conversation with Altman where the OpenAI chief laid out the same vision. Altman predicted we'd soon see a "one-person, billion-dollar company," something that would have sounded absurd before generative AI entered the picture. The idea is that advanced AI agents will handle so much of the operational work that a single founder could manage what currently requires entire teams.
AI Reshapes the Startup Playbook
Stebbings pulled out several other predictions from his chat with Jonathan that paint a picture of how dramatically AI could change entrepreneurship. First, the barrier to starting a company is about to collapse. AI will replace many early hires, meaning nontechnical founders can launch businesses with minimal capital. No need for a full engineering team on day one when AI can handle much of the technical heavy lifting.
Second, partially autonomous AI tools will dominate the landscape. Stebbings cited Cursor, a coding platform, as an example of AI that enhances human work rather than fully replacing it. The sweet spot isn't complete automation but powerful assistance that makes humans dramatically more effective.
The Death of Traditional SaaS?
Perhaps the most provocative take: "SaaS as we know it is over." Jonathan pointed to two shifts driving this change. Foundation model providers are pushing deeper into the application layer, and AI agents are becoming capable enough to complete tasks without traditional software interfaces. Why click through a dashboard when an AI agent can just do the thing you were going to do anyway?
This isn't just theoretical musing. The technology is advancing fast enough that these predictions feel less like distant possibilities and more like near-term realities. Whether one person truly can run 100 companies remains to be seen, but the direction of travel is clear: AI is going to fundamentally reshape what's possible for individual workers and entrepreneurs.
The question isn't whether AI will make us more productive. It's whether we're ready for just how much more productive it might make us.