FAQ
Frequently asked questions
Clear answers about wallet credit, usage, subscriptions, and how Tycoon charges for work.
What exactly does Polsia do that a founder could not do with ChatGPT?
Polsia is not a chat interface. It is a managed runtime where AI agents hold roles, own recurring workflows, read from the same shared memory, write to the same integrations, and report back to the founder on a cadence. A founder using ChatGPT gets a smart assistant that forgets between sessions and cannot take autonomous action. Polsia gives you a CEO that runs a Monday morning meeting, a CFO that closes the books, a CMO that ships content, and a COO that chases follow-ups — all pointed at the same company. That is a different product category from a chat tool. The open question in June 2026 is whether that autonomy comes with enough reliability when it's all maintained by one person.
Who actually buys Polsia, and what does it replace?
The ICP is solo founders, side-project builders, and tiny teams who want a company to run without running it themselves. Most customers are replacing a combination of a fractional operator (~$5-8K/month), a virtual assistant, and the DIY duct-tape stack of Zapier + ChatGPT + Notion. At $29-59/mo base, the entry price is almost zero — but usage-based add-ons (ad spend, boosts, instant packs) can add up. The common thread: the buyer wants operational output, not another dashboard.
How did Polsia grow to 8,509 companies with no marketing team?
Four ingredients: (1) a credible founder story shared openly on Indie Hackers, Product Hunt, and X — Ben's CloudKitchens-to-solo narrative resonated with operator-founders; (2) a low entry price ($29-59/mo) that removed adoption friction; (3) a product that produced visible outcomes in week one, triggering organic referrals inside founder communities; (4) a radical transparency play — the public live dashboard at polsia.com/api/public/live turned metrics into marketing. Polsia did not rely on paid ads. Distribution was founder-led content plus word of mouth. They also ran physical ad campaigns in San Francisco — unusual for an AI platform.
How is Polsia different from Tycoon?
Both are AI-employee platforms, but they represent opposite philosophies. Polsia is full autopilot — you subscribe and it runs your company with minimal visibility. Tycoon is directed autonomy — you chat with an AI CEO who executes under your direction, with every decision logged. Polsia is a single-founder operation at 8,509 companies and $10.4M ARR (declining). Tycoon is a team-backed platform launched May 2026, earlier stage but with real engineering infrastructure. Founders who want outcomes without involvement prefer Polsia. Founders who want leverage with visibility and reliability prefer Tycoon.
What is the risk of building a business on top of Polsia?
Three risks worth naming after June 2026. First, the single-founder dependency: at 8,509 companies, the bus factor is 1. When bugs happen, the founder is on X fixing them — impressive dedication, but what happens when he's unavailable? Second, the declining economics: per-company ARR dropped 15.7% in one week. If the trend continues, the platform's unit economics deteriorate even as user count grows. Third, post-fundraise pressure: with $30M from top-tier VCs at a $250M valuation, Polsia must grow into that number. ARR declining while users grow is the opposite of what investors want to see. All three risks are manageable, but worth planning for — especially if your business can't afford downtime.