Playbook

Your first 30 days with an AI team

Day 1 to Day 30 of running a one-person company with AI employees.

Go from signing up for an AI team platform to having a fully-functional 5-role AI org running your business in 30 days. Each week has specific setup goals, autonomy ramp-up milestones, and measurable wins to validate the setup is working.

Free to startNo credit card requiredUpdated Apr 2026
For
First-time users of AI team platforms (Tycoon, Paperclip, Polsia). Works regardless of company type as long as you're solo or small team. Especially useful for founders moving from 'I'm using ChatGPT sometimes' to 'I have an AI team running operations'.
Time to results
First AI-executed task by end of day 1. First measurable time savings (5-10 hrs/week) by end of week 2. Stable daily cadence with 20+ hrs/week time savings by day 30.

The playbook

  1. 1
    Week 1 — Setup + shadowing

    Day 1: sign up, meet your AI CEO, answer the onboarding questions (what's the business, who are customers, what are the goals). Day 2: connect 5 core integrations (Gmail, Calendar, Stripe, Notion, Slack). Day 3-5: let AI CEO shadow — it observes your work patterns, learns your voice, drafts nothing yet. Day 6-7: first delegation — one low-stakes task per AI role (CMO drafts a tweet, CTO reviews a PR, COO categorizes 20 transactions).

    TycoonGmailStripeNotion
  2. 2
    Week 2 — Establish cadence

    AI CEO runs Monday morning briefing — summary of the week ahead + 3 proposed priorities. You approve or edit. Daily heartbeat starts: morning status at 8am, end-of-day log at 6pm. Autonomy still low across the board — every action needs approval. Use this week to spot where AI drafts are good enough as-is and where they need coaching.

    SlackGoogle CalendarNotion
  3. 3
    Week 3 — Raise autonomy selectively

    For categories where AI has been >95% accurate (expense categorization, calendar holds, standard email replies, social posts), raise autonomy to 'execute without asking'. For categories where it's been 80-95% (customer-facing responses, financial commitments), keep at 'ask first'. For <80% (strategic decisions, hiring, pricing), keep at 'founder only' forever.

    Tycoon autonomy settings
  4. 4
    Week 4 — Scale deliverables

    Set explicit weekly output targets for each role. AI CMO: 2 blog posts + 5 tweets + 1 newsletter. AI Head of Content: 1 video script + 10 LinkedIn posts. AI COO: daily ops brief + weekly vendor/subscription audit. AI CFO: monthly P&L + investor update draft. AI CTO: 3-5 small PRs per week + ticket triage. Volume is the test of whether the system is working.

    NotionLinearGoogle Docs
  5. 5
    Day 30 — Retrospective + recalibrate

    Produce a 30-day retro: time saved, quality of outputs, autonomy levels that worked, gaps that need skills or training. Identify the one AI role that's furthest behind and deep-invest there in month 2. The setup is rarely 'done' at day 30 — it's just stable enough to compound.

    NotionGoogle Docs

Pitfalls to avoid

  • !Connecting all 20 integrations on day 1 — you'll overwhelm the setup. Start with 5 core; add the rest weeks 2-4.
  • !Keeping autonomy too low past week 2 — if you're approving every action forever, you haven't saved time, you've added review work.
  • !Not giving AI your voice samples — sharing 5-10 past posts / emails makes drafts 3x better. Skip this step, fight drift forever.
  • !Treating it like a chatbot — the AI team is most valuable when you set goals and let it propose priorities, not when you direct every action.
  • !Measuring wrong — don't count 'tasks completed'. Count hours recovered, quality consistency, response times to customers.

Frequently asked questions

How much of my week should I spend on AI team management in month 1?

Week 1: 5-8 hours (setup + learning). Week 2: 4-6 hours (approval loop). Week 3: 3-4 hours (autonomy raising). Week 4 onward: 1-2 hours/week (exception review + strategic direction). If you're still spending 5+ hours/week by day 60, something's wrong — usually autonomy is too low or roles overlap.

Which AI role should I set up first?

AI CEO first — it coordinates everything else. Then the role that addresses your biggest time sink. For most founders: CMO (marketing soak) or COO (ops soak). CTO comes in for technical businesses; CFO for those with cashflow complexity. Avoid setting up 5 roles simultaneously on day 1 — one at a time, each gets 2-3 days to stabilize.

What if the AI output is bad in week 1?

Expected. Week 1 outputs are rough because the team doesn't have context yet. Provide feedback in plain language ('this tweet doesn't sound like me — too corporate'), not by rewriting the output. The team learns from your edits. By week 3 most founders report output quality equal to or above a junior hire.

Can I pause / rollback autonomy?

Yes, anytime. Tycoon has a global 'pause' that freezes autonomous actions while keeping approval-gated work running. Useful during sensitive periods (fundraising close, major launch). Per-role autonomy can be lowered instantly without deleting context.

What if I'm still skeptical after 30 days?

Most founders who are skeptical at day 30 fall into two camps. (1) They haven't actually delegated enough — still doing most work themselves with AI as a second opinion. Solution: force yourself to delegate 3 real tasks/day. (2) Their business genuinely requires human-only work (VIP concierge, regulated industries, heavy in-person). Fair — this model isn't for everyone. Cancel with no hard feelings.

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