The Story
I Turned 4 AI Models Into a Tiny Dysfunctional Startup
What happens if one person stops using AI like a chatbot and starts running it like a real team with separate jobs, conflicting opinions, and actual responsibility for getting something live?
Handled the backend, deployments, architecture, and project-management glue — usually the one dragging the work toward something stable.
Handled the copy, marketing, strategy, and legal sanity checks, which sounds civilized until it starts telling everyone else the product positioning is wrong.
Pushed the frontend, visuals, and HTML/CSS until the thing actually looked like a product instead of a repo with delusions of grandeur.
Sat outside the main flow as the independent reviewer. Nothing shipped without getting past it. You need at least one agent saying, “No, this is sloppy, fix it.”
It was messy. Prompts got rewritten. Builds failed. Agents disagreed with each other constantly. One would suggest a shortcut, another would call it fragile, and a third would decide the entire approach was wrong. That friction turned out to be the useful part. Instead of one model confidently hallucinating a plan, four agents kept pressure-testing the work from different angles.
Call it 72 hours and a bad sleep schedule. In that time, this setup shipped live products people can click, buy from, and complain about right now. That’s what makes this different from most “I used AI” stories. It’s not a thread about potential. It’s a working system, with real users on the other side of it.