Blue Alchemist
45.9K posts

Blue Alchemist
@Blue8Alchemist
What happens when AI enters the domain of thinking and meaning-making? Builder × Contemplative practitioner × Systems thinker.








The future of work is everyone having AI employees with their own accounts. Its own email. Its own Slack login. Its own seat on the team. With Claude Tag etc, the agent is someone you tag and not just something you prompt. You delegate to it the way you'd delegate to a coworker. It writes the code, handles the inbox, builds the deck, even browses X on its own login for updates. It has it's own history, so you can hold it accountable when it messes up or does an incredible job. And the strangest part is how fast it feels kinda normal. Week 1 it's odd to thank a bot in Slack. Week 3 you're annoyed when it's slow to reply, the same way you'd be annoyed at a coworker. The account makes your brain file it under "person," and your expectations follow. This is what AI-native actually looks like. Second order effects of this shift: 1. Companies will start "hiring" agents the way they hire people, with job descriptions, onboarding docs, and performance reviews, and someone's whole job becomes managing a team that never sleeps. 2. The agent that's been at your company for two years becomes more valuable than any new hire, because it holds every decision, every thread, every relationship in one login that never quits. 3. IT and security have a nightmare on their hands, because every agent account is a new door into your company, and nobody's figured out who's responsible when an agent gets phished or goes rogue. 4. A black market forms for trained agent accounts, where a fully onboarded agent with months of company context sells for real money, the same way aged social accounts do today. 5. The org chart fills with names that aren't people, and one day you realize half your "team" is agents and you genuinely can't imagine running the company without them. 6. Insane amount of vertical startup opportunities. My partner @boringmarketer just launched a Slack agent "employee" for marketing related tasks. 100% bootstrapped. Probably 1000+ vertical $1M ARR "employee" in Slack startup opportunities. TLDR; Slack tag is cool But give one agent its own account this week. Watch how fast your brain stops treating it like software. That's the whole shift, and you can feel it in about 3 days.











