FAQ
Frequently asked questions
Clear answers about wallet credit, usage, subscriptions, and how Tycoon charges for work.
What is an autonomous business?
An autonomous business is a business where execution runs without the founder in the loop for most decisions. A team of AI employees with judgment and coordination handles marketing, sales, product, ops, and support continuously. The founder sets direction and owns the customer, not the work.
How is an autonomous business different from automation?
Automation follows fixed scripts. An autonomous business has AI employees that read context, make judgment calls, coordinate with each other through a CEO layer, and escalate when they reach their autonomy boundary. Automation gives you 2-3x leverage. Autonomous businesses give you 10-100x because they work 24/7 across multiple workstreams without human coordination.
What are the stages of building an autonomous business?
Most founders progress through a 5-level maturity model: Manual → Augmented → Delegated → Coordinated → Autonomous → Self-running. The key transition is from level 2 to 3 — when you stop assigning individual tasks and start directing a CEO who delegates. Most serious one-person companies operate at level 3-4.
Who is accountable when an AI employee makes a mistake?
You are, because you set the autonomy boundaries. Mature autonomous business platforms handle this with three controls: explicit scope per role, escalation on high-risk actions (money, legal, external publishing), and decision logs for audit. Autonomy doesn't mean invisibility — it means directed trust.
Which businesses can actually autonomize in 2026?
Knowledge-work businesses where patterns are rich and action spaces are bounded: content operations, SEO, newsletters, SaaS support, ecommerce ops, research-heavy consulting, info-products. Physical operations still need humans. Highly regulated domains are possible (see Medvi in telehealth) with careful structure.