The right first
AI employee is the one that removes you as the bottleneck in the function that consumes most of your time. Most founders already know which function that is — they just have not framed it as a hiring decision.
If you spend most of your day writing code, fixing bugs, and managing deployments, hire an AI Developer (Darren) first. Darren takes feature requests in plain language — "add user authentication with Google login" — and ships the complete implementation: code, tests, pull request, deployment. He reads your existing codebase to understand patterns and conventions. He handles bugs and technical debt alongside new features. Founders who start with Darren typically ship 3-5x more features per month and reclaim 15-20 hours a week of development time.
If you spend most of your day creating content, managing social media, running email campaigns, and trying to grow your audience, hire an AI Marketer (Casey) first. Casey builds a content strategy aligned with your business goals, creates a content calendar, writes blog posts and SEO pages, drafts social media content, runs email campaigns, and produces weekly performance reports. She learns your brand voice over time and improves with feedback. Founders who start with Casey typically see their first organic traffic within two weeks.
If you spend most of your day answering customer emails, handling support tickets, triaging bugs, and managing customer relationships, hire an AI Support Agent (Sam) first. Sam handles common questions, routes technical issues to a developer (human or AI), manages billing inquiries, and maintains a knowledge base that gets smarter with every interaction. Founders who start with Sam typically reduce their support time by 80% in the first week.
If your biggest bottleneck is not doing the work but deciding what to do — prioritizing, coordinating, tracking progress, and reporting to stakeholders — hire an
AI CEO (Astra) first. Astra takes your company vision and quarterly goals, decomposes them into projects, assigns work (to you, to human team members, or to other AI agents), tracks progress, and produces a Monday morning brief. She replaces the operational management layer entirely.
Start with one. The AI employee you hire first should address your biggest pain point — not someone else's. Once that function is running smoothly, add the next bottleneck. Within a month, most founders have a small AI team and a dramatically lighter workload.