Batchelor.ai is the operating manual for the solo founder era. One operator, a swarm of AI agents, and the discipline to ship. No team. No capital. No permission. Just the playbook, the prompts, and the proof.
The rules of building have changed forever. The solo founder is no longer a liability. They are the most dangerous person in any room.
The Solo Founder's Complete Guide to Building a Profitable Business with AI Agents. Eight chapters. A 30-day launch plan. Every prompt, framework, and workflow it took to build Batchelor.ai — written down and handed to you.
This is not theory. It is the operating manual I am running on myself, in public, in real time. Read it in an afternoon. Execute it in a month. Keep it for every launch after this one.
Every piece of content lives inside one of these. It's the system that builds a brand without a team — and it's the same system this site, this newsletter, and every video are built on.
AI trend analysis, future-of-work theses, the new shape of solo building.
Step-by-step walkthroughs and real builds. The proof-of-concept content.
The honest documentation. Vulnerability is the highest-trust format on the internet.
Which agents to use, what they're good at, how to brief them like an employee.
Revenue milestones, subscriber counts, transparent reports. The ongoing case study.
Each stream funds and feeds the next. The discipline is sequencing them — ship one completely before opening the next. This is the full ladder taught in the Blueprint, executed live on this site.
For the local operators — med spas, law firms, dental practices, agencies — who know AI is coming for their industry but have no idea where to start. A clear, written diagnostic in 72 hours. No retainer. No fluff.
A 12-point scan of every workflow in your business — from intake to billing — flagging the ones AI will replace, augment, or accelerate first.
Out of every possible deployment, the three with the highest revenue impact, the shortest payback, and the lowest implementation risk — sequenced.
Tools, prompts, vendors, and a week-by-week rollout. Specific enough to hand to a VA. Cheap enough to fund with one new customer.