The Experiment That Could Have Killed My Business
If you're interested, I also have a really good article here
Six months ago, I made a decision that sounded insane to everyone around me.
I started handing over pieces of my company to artificial intelligence.
Not just the boring stuff. Not just the email drafts and meeting notes. I mean the real stuff. The systems. The processes. The infrastructure that keeps a 10-person video production company running without collapsing into chaos.
And I didn't stop there.
I moved almost every computer in my office to Linux. I killed Slack. I killed Notion. I replaced them with open-source alternatives running on my own servers. I built custom software. I connected everything to an AI agent that now runs the show.
After six months, I can say with confidence:
We are now an AI-powered company.
But here's the twist. The term everyone uses for this is "AI-first." I hate that term. It's marketing fluff, like "cloud-based" or "blockchain" back in the day.
I prefer something else.
We are Human-First, AI-Powered.
And today, I'm going to show you exactly what that means.
The Problem: Creative People Are Chaos Machines
My company makes YouTube videos. Lots of them.
Every video goes through the same process:
An idea
Research
A script
Filming (this video, right now)
Product shots
Editing
Review
Thumbnail + title
Publishing
Simple, right?
Wrong.
Behind the scenes, there's purchasing, inventory management, finance, project management, sales, IT, and a thousand tiny decisions that keep everything from falling apart. And here's the thing about creative people — we're not exactly known for our organizational skills.
We miss deadlines. We get inspired at 2 AM and change everything. We lose track of gear. We forget what we said in a video three years ago.
For years, I tried to fix this with traditional software development tools.
I implemented Agile. I used Scrum, Jira, Kanban, standup meetings — everything I learned from my years as a programmer. And it helped. A little.
But I always dreamed of something more.
I dreamed of a custom application. One program that controlled everything — tasks, calendars, budgets, scripts, footage, inventory. All in one place. All perfectly organized.
The problem? Building that kind of software costs a fortune. You need a developer for six months, then more to maintain it. Most small companies can't afford that.
I couldn't afford that.
But I could afford something else.
An AI.
How I Built the Impossible
First, I did a full financial analysis of my company. Every expense, every subscription, everything we were wasting money on.
I fed it all into an LLM and asked it to categorize every single expense. It cross-referenced emails, databases, and company names. It figured out what we were actually paying for and whether it was worth it.
That's when I discovered we were spending a ridiculous amount on apps like Slack and Notion.
So I killed them.
I replaced Slack with Element (open source). I replaced Notion with Outline. I built custom integrations. I moved everything to open-source, self-hosted alternatives running on my own hardware.
Then I built Orion.
Orion started as a simple benchmark database. I'd test computers, run performance tests, and store the results. It became an inventory system. Then a task manager. Then a project tracker. Then a full operating system for the entire company.
Today, Orion handles everything:
Video pipelines
Team tasks
Google Calendar sync
Sales data
Inventory tracking
Everything
But here's the thing — I built all of this with AI.
I tell the AI what I need. It writes the code. I review it. We iterate. What used to take me months now takes days.
10x faster. No joke.
The Brain in the Basement
Remember that server I mentioned?
It's a monster. Threadripper CPU. 96 cores. 96GB of VRAM on an RTX 6000 Pro. The most powerful graphics card you can put in a PC before you need a datacenter.
Inside that server runs something called Janus.
Janus is my AI assistant. But "assistant" is an understatement. Janus is the brain of the entire company.
Here's what Janus can do:
Access every video we've ever made
Search transcriptions and pull clips instantly
Know which products we've covered
Answer any question about company operations
Transcribe audio
Send WhatsApp messages
Alert the team when something is confirmed
Find things from old videos
Remember decisions so we don't repeat mistakes
And every Monday morning, Janus runs a routine:
"Here are the videos that should have been published last week. Here are the tasks that didn't get done. Is it realistic to hit this week's deadlines? If not, let's reschedule. And by the way, I checked your calendar — you have a dentist appointment on Thursday. Don't forget."
Janus doesn't just track tasks. It understands context. It knows when I'm traveling. It knows when we're behind. It knows when the team needs breathing room.
And I am the only one who talks to it.
The AI Editor That Saves Hours
Filming this video took me 1 hour and 20 minutes.
That's 80 minutes of me talking, repeating myself, messing up, going off-track, and generally being a human.
My editor used to spend hours cutting this down to a clean 30-minute video.
Now we have an AI tool that:
Watches the entire raw footage
Transcribes every word
Detects repetitions and mistakes
Makes a first cut
Imports product clips and b-roll automatically
Generates a DaVinci Resolve project file
The editor still does a second pass. He still makes creative decisions. But the AI saves him hours of boring, repetitive work.
He can focus on making it good, not making it exist.
The Digital Clone
Here's where it gets crazy.
We have a database that contains everything we've ever said in a video. Every review, every opinion, every benchmark, every off-hand comment.
When I ask Janus about a video I made three years ago, it finds it instantly.
When the team needs b-roll of a specific product, it's already indexed and ready.
When sales needs to know if we've covered a certain brand, they ask Janus.
It's like having a digital clone of the entire company.
And this is where the "Human-First" part comes in.
The Line I Refuse to Cross
People ask me all the time: "Do you use AI to write your scripts?"
No. Absolutely not.
I tried. The AI wrote something generic, predictable, and soulless. It had no personality. No edge. No me.
And honestly? The AI thought my ideas were terrible.
I once made a video about a MacBook Pro and didn't mention the performance at all. I spent the whole video talking about the engineering, the curvature of the chassis, the angle of the edges — and how it represented a return to Apple's PowerPC era.
The AI told me it was a bad idea.
That video got millions of views.
AI can't predict what makes humans connect. It can't replicate your personality, your sense of humor, your weird obsessions, your off-beat takes. That's what makes us creators unique.
So I drew a line.
The creative part is for humans. The boring part is for AI.
Scripts? Human. Concepts? Human. Art direction? Human.
Editing, organization, scheduling, research, data management? AI.
The Team's AI Nudge
Creative people are chaotic. We don't check our tasks. We don't move our cards. We don't update our status.
It drives me crazy.
So I built Fama.
Fama is an AI that follows up with the team. It sends them messages:
"Hey, how's that edit going? Any blockers? Let me know and I'll update your tasks."
They respond with a voice note. Fama transcribes it. It updates the task board. It tells me what's happening.
I don't have to be a manager with a whip. The AI does it for me.
And they don't even mind. It's a bot. They can ignore it if they want. But it keeps things moving.
What This Means for the Future
Look, I'm not saying AI is going to replace everyone.
But I am saying that a single person with technical skills can now do what used to require a whole team.
Before AI, a small company like mine couldn't afford a full-time developer. Building custom software was a luxury. Now? One person with the right knowledge can automate massive parts of the business in weeks, not months.
The new job isn't "programmer." It's "AI implementer."
Someone who understands the business, understands the systems, and knows how to make AI solve real problems.
And that's exactly what I want to teach.
The Big Question
After six months, I've learned something important:
AI will change work. It already is.
People are losing jobs. That's real. But new opportunities are opening too. People who understand how to integrate AI into real businesses — not just prompt engineering, but actual systems — are going to be incredibly valuable.
I built a system that my company couldn't have dreamed of a year ago. I did it with almost no budget. I did it with AI.
And I'm just getting started.
So here's the question I keep asking myself:
Can anyone do this?
Do you need to be a programmer? Do you need a computer science degree? Do you need to understand networking and cybersecurity and databases?
Or can someone with curiosity, determination, and a few good prompts learn enough to build something remarkable?
I think the answer is yes.
And that's what I'm going to explore next.
The Takeaway
Six months ago, I was skeptical. I thought AI might be all hype. I thought it might be like crypto — a flashy trend that fades.
I was wrong.
AI is real. It's here. And it's changing how small businesses can operate.
But it's not replacing humans. Not yet. Maybe not ever.
It's making humans more powerful.
My company is Human-First, AI-Powered.
We do the creative work. We make the art. We have the weird ideas that nobody else has.
And the AI does everything else.
That's the future I want to live in.
Your Turn
Are you using AI in your business? Or are you still waiting to see if it's worth it?
Drop a comment below — I reply to everyone.
And if you want to learn how to build systems like this, I'm working on something. Stay tuned.
The Verdict: AI doesn't replace humans. It replaces boring tasks. And that's a future worth building.
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