FAQ
Frequently asked questions
Clear answers about wallet credit, usage, subscriptions, and how Tycoon charges for work.
Can a solo operator really produce a daily newsletter at the level of Morning Brew?
At the top tier, not quite — Morning Brew's editorial depth still comes from a real team. But in a specific niche (AI for finance, B2B SaaS trends, crypto for professionals, a well-defined industry), a solo operator with a modern AI production stack can produce a newsletter that readers find consistently useful, and advertisers find consistently valuable. The compression is not in quality for its own sake; it is in quality per operator-hour, which is the only metric that matters when you are one person.
How should a solo operator use AI without the newsletter feeling AI-generated?
Three rules. First, AI does research and summaries; the operator writes the top of every issue in their own voice. Second, the operator picks the topics — do not let AI choose what to cover, because that is where editorial taste lives. Third, run a 'does this sound like me?' pass on every draft before sending. The test is: if a reader who has read you for six months cannot tell which sentences are AI-drafted, you are doing it right. The moment they can tell, you have a retention problem.
What is a realistic 2026 revenue ramp for a solo newsletter?
Rough ranges, from published operator accounts and Beehiiv / Substack data. Months 1-3: 1-5K subscribers in a defined niche, minimal revenue. Months 4-9: 10-25K subscribers, $5-15K/month from early sponsorships and initial paid tier. Year 1-2: 50-100K+ subscribers in a strong niche, $30-100K/month. A small number of top performers in premium niches cross $100K/month in year 2-3. These are not averages; they are what the upper quartile of disciplined operators can do.
How does the rise of AI search affect solo newsletters?
It helps and hurts. It hurts because general curation (aggregating links for people) is increasingly handled by ChatGPT and Perplexity. It helps because what AI search cannot replicate is a human operator's voice, relationships, and curation taste — which is precisely what premium newsletters already sell. The winning move is to compete on the axes AI cannot copy: original reporting, relationships with sources, strong editorial opinions, and the sense that the newsletter is a personality, not a feed.
How does this pattern relate to Tycoon's one-person company thesis?
Newsletters are the cleanest retail example of the thesis. One operator with an AI production team, a Stripe account, and a distribution surface (email + X + LinkedIn) can run a business that, a decade ago, would have needed 15-30 people. The lesson is not 'start a newsletter.' It is that most content, research, and operational work can be structured the same way: a human operator at the top of the funnel making choices, and a team of AI employees executing the specific workflows. Newsletters just happen to be the place where the model is most visible in 2026.