calanthia
3K posts

calanthia
@calanthiaaa
serial founder (ai newco in stealth) // gtm advisor // writing soft thinking on ai-native growth for the real economy

> everyone racing to sell AI tools > buyers already drowning in the ones they bought > the real service is someone walking in and making the stack actually work > $12K/month retainers. solo operators. almost nobody doing it yet



Carry has been acquired by Angellist and Lettuce We started this company 3.5 years ago to help business owners make better financial decisions These two transactions allow us to continue to do this important work in a bigger way Thank you to everyone who supported us ❤️

i interviewed the agency making “fan pages” for brands. secondary accounts that feel more like a rogue employee took over than a strategy. so far they’ve launched arby’s boys and not spirit airlines. the arby’s page generated over 100m organic views in the first six months.




Handshake has crossed $1B in gross revenue run-rate, up from ~$550M at the start of the year per The Information. An incredible AI "refounding" from @GarrettLord and team to move into the AI data market under 1.5 years ago


THE CLEAREST PATH TO A $10M+ SOFTWARE EXIT in 2 YEARS (with AI and agents) building an agency right now is one of the most interesting business moves the productized agency had its moment in 2022. it collapsed because scaling humans is a nightmare. inconsistent output, people quitting, margins getting crushed. most of the founders (and creators) who tried it got burned and moved on but the thesis was right. the labor problem is just solved now with AI, claude code, openclaw etc. here's the actual playbook i'd run today: pick one painful deliverable for one specific buyer. like SEO content for e-commerce brands doing $1M+ but not "marketing." or like ad creatives for DTC brands spending $50k/month on meta. one thing. one customer. that's it then you build the AI workflow behind it. you're selling an outcome on a monthly retainer. $3-5k/month. 80%+ margins because your cost is compute and a few hours of QA "BuT tHaT'S nOt a BiG bUsInnesS" okay but you're still swinging for the fences because the agency IS the research and development for your agent SaaS every client is paying you to figure out what to automate. you're learning what breaks, what scales, what customers actually want. by month 4 you know exactly what to productize. you build the software on top of the workflow you've already proven works and already have customers paying for agency funds the agent SaaS. SaaS scales without the agency overhead. the clients become your first software customers now let's talk about what this actually looks like financially year 1: 10 clients at $4k/month. $480k revenue. 2 people. maybe $80k in costs including compute, tools, one part time VA. you're taking home $400k between two people while building the software in the background year 2: you launch the software. your 10 agency clients are the first to convert. they already trust you. they've seen the output. you charge $800/month for the software version. now you have recurring software revenue AND the agency still running year 3: agency is winding down or running on autopilot. software has 200 customers at $800/month. that's $1.9M ARR. 2-3 person team. 85% margins. you are now a very attractive acquisition target the exit math is interesting. SaaS at $1.9M ARR with strong retention trades at 5-8x revenue. that's a $10-15M exit for something two people built in 3 years starting with zero VC CAVEAT: Startups are hard. A lot needs to go right. But from a framework perspective, I think this probably the lowest risk, highest reward option for lots of of folks and most of the businesses cost $0 to start basically this is the most capital efficient path to a software exit that exists right now happy building

Excited to announce our $85M fundraise from @lightspeedvp and investment in our first CPA firm. We're in the game now! Full press release here: businesswire.com/news/home/2026…









