It’s a strange time for business. Essentially, the dramatic rise of AI over the last five years or so has re-ordered so much of what we used to think about how enterprise works, that a lot of people who are less thrilled, or further from the technology itself, are rather demoralized, or grouchy, about it.

The cloud wasn’t like this. Its reach was more limited, and its power more incremental. It didn’t bother people so much that you could offer any software product through the web. In fact, it felt convenient.

Part of what’s bothering people now is this idea of giving agency to digital entities. It’s a direct challenge to the core value that we ascribe to humans, especially in America. We have this collective concept that you’re defined by your job – which is a problem if you don’t have one.

In that context, some are starting to think that it’s a better idea to approach the work world from a different perspective: as a self-employed “solopreneur” than as a cog in a corporate wheel, or even a member of a smaller team in something like a C-corp.

I was taking a look at the AI Daily Brief web site, where my favorite podcaster, Nathaniel Whittemore, hosts these broadcasts on what’s happening in the AI world. There’s an article on the site with this blurb:

“AI is flipping which career path counts as 'safe' … AI lowers the activation cost of building a startup, but it also upends assumptions about what safe looks like on the corporate side. When people aren't sure what corporate roles will even look like post-AI, the old risk spectrum of 'startup = risky, corporate = safe' stops holding.”

That’s a big endorsement of the startup path, and the urge to “go it alone” – but unlike some of the other sources where I’ve read this kind of stuff, the AIDB site provides actual numbers. Let’s go over a few.

Findings on Solopreneurship

Okay, some of these statistics are a little complex – but they’re real indicators, and you’ll see that they clearly point to a rise in self-supported startups:

The first one is the percentage of C-corp filings with a single founder, in the second quarter of 2026, which just ended. That number is 63%. So that’s the percentage of filing businesses of this type.

Another is an increase, of 27%, in solo business applications, specifically in “high-AI” sectors. So 27% more of these AI-type businesses have one solopreneur. You can see how these numbers are segmented, partial and based on changing context. But you can also see that many new entrepreneurs are choosing to go it alone.

I must confess being puzzled about this one. The number: 25%. The metric: how much leaner AI-native startups run (compared to others? On what time frame?) at the same valuations.

I’m just going to leave that there.

The next one, an estimated 20% rise in solo self-employment in AI-exposed occupations, from 2022-2025, has a time frame, and we also know what we’re measuring: numbers of founders in AI-related businesses going solo.

And now for something completely different. Here’s a good one: Tesla’s new token spending cap, $200 per week, per employee.

That doesn’t say anything about solopreneurs, but some of these numbers were also mixed in above.

What you can see is that startups are lean, and corporations are brittle. Startups have the capacity to pivot quickly, and corporations are weighed down by bureaucracy and their own complex org charts. Corporations made more sense when you needed a lot of infrastructure to make an AI play. Now you can fit an evolved LLM on a smartphone. A lot of these spotlighted solopreneurships are making money hand over fist, by scaling quickly, without a lot of overhead. And that’s the name of the game in any business: keep costs low, and bill.

We’ll see how this kind of thing shakes out over the next few years. But what I’m hearing from new grads, and others who are advising them, is that if you’re not going to be a welder or an electrician or in skilled trades, it makes more sense to be a solopreneur, an army of one, armed with ideas, and grit, and determination, and smarts.

Go to it, young folks. Stay tuned.