Solo Scale: The New Business Model AI Just Made Possible
There’s a conversation happening about what AI means for software creation. Elena Verna at Lovable calls it Mom-and-Pop SaaS. The thesis is smart: as the cost of building software collapses, domain experts — not just developers — become builders. She’s right. And it’s only half the story.
The bigger shift isn’t happening in software products. It’s happening in services.
Agentic AI and vibe coding aren’t just lowering the cost of building apps. They’re dismantling the core constraint of every services business ever built: the ratio of expert time to revenue. That constraint: one expert, one engagement, finite hours, is what kept professional services firms trapped at 10–20% EBITDA margins while SaaS companies ran 60–80%.
That constraint is ending.
The Old Model Was Always a Labor Problem
Services businesses sell expertise. But expertise doesn’t scale. You hire more experts, manage more overhead, and your margins compress. The best consulting firms in the world, running mature operations, optimized for utilization, still average under 10% EBITDA. The 2025 SPI Professional Services Maturity Benchmark, covering 509 firms managing $63 billion in revenue, put the industry average at 9.9%. Historic low.
The fundamental problem is structural. Services revenue scales linearly with headcount. Software revenue doesn’t. That gap is what the entire VC-backed SaaS industry was built to exploit.
Now the gap is available to everyone.
What Agentic AI Actually Changes
Gartner projects that 40% of enterprise applications will embed task-specific AI agents by end of 2026, up from under 5% in 2025. That’s an enterprise story. The more important story is what’s happening at the edges.
Agentic AI doesn’t just make individuals more productive. It allows one person to deploy systems that do execution work that previously required a team. Research. Analysis. Outreach. Reporting. Monitoring. Drafting. These aren’t tasks an AI does instead of you. They’re tasks an AI does alongside you, continuously, at scale, without adding headcount.
The economics flip. A solo practitioner running AI agents across ten client engagements simultaneously isn’t running a consulting business anymore. They’re running something new.
Vibe coding accelerates this further. The market for AI coding tools hit $4.7 billion in 2026 and is projected to reach $12.3 billion by 2027. Sixty-three percent of vibe coding users identify as non-developers. The cost of building a functional product has dropped from roughly $200,000 to about $5,000. Build timelines compressed from six months to six weeks.
The combination matters. Agentic AI handles execution at scale. Vibe coding eliminates the technical barrier to building the systems and tools that deliver it. A domain expert with deep practitioner knowledge and a willingness to learn these tools now has access to a business architecture that didn’t exist two years ago.
Introducing Solo Scale
I want to name what’s emerging, because it’s distinct from anything we’ve described before.
Solo Scale is a new category of AI-enabled business: expert-led, agent-powered, running at software margins.
The entity at the center of a Solo Scale business is what I call an Expert Scale operator. A practitioner who combines deep domain knowledge with agentic AI systems to deliver services at a leverage ratio that traditional firms can’t match.
This isn’t freelancing. Freelancing trades time for money at a fixed rate. Solo Scale trades expertise for outcomes, with AI handling the execution volume. The margin structure is fundamentally different.
This isn’t SaaS. There’s no product to sell at scale without the practitioner. The expertise is the product. But the delivery infrastructure is AI.
Three things define a Solo Scale business:
1. Domain depth. The operator has years, often decades, of practitioner knowledge in a specific field. Not generalist knowledge. Vertical expertise that took time to accumulate and can’t be easily replicated by a model alone.
2. Agentic infrastructure. AI agents handle the execution layer: research, analysis, drafting, monitoring, outreach, reporting. The operator sets strategy, reviews output, exercises judgment. The agents do the volume.
3. Software-like margins. Because the execution scales without proportional headcount, the margin structure approaches software economics. Not 10–20%. Closer to 40–70%. Territory that professional services firms have never accessed before.
Elena Verna’s data from Lovable points in this direction: 80% of builders intend to monetize. 35% are already generating revenue. But the real money won’t be in software products built by domain experts. It will be in services businesses run by domain experts, using software as the delivery infrastructure, not as the product.
The Five Categories That Emerge First
Not every services domain is equally positioned for Solo Scale. The highest-value early categories share three characteristics: high complexity (which protects against commoditization), high existing fee levels (which means the margin expansion is large in absolute dollars), and repeatable workflow structures (which AI agents can execute reliably).
Here are the five categories where I expect Solo Scale businesses to emerge first: including two that may surprise you.
1. Specialized B2B Advisory
Management consulting, strategic advisory, and fractional executive services are the clearest near-term Solo Scale opportunity. The practitioner provides judgment, relationships, and pattern recognition accumulated over a career. AI agents handle the research, analysis, competitive monitoring, and report generation that junior associates and analysts currently do.
A senior advisor running five engagements simultaneously, with AI handling the execution layer across all five, is running a business with fundamentally different economics than a traditional consulting firm. No associate overhead. No utilization management. No bench time. The margin structure changes completely.
This is not hypothetical. It’s happening now, across advisory practices of every kind.
2. Vertical Content and Intelligence
B2B information and intelligence businesses have always been constrained by the cost of producing high-quality, specialized content at volume. The editorial team is the cost structure. AI changes that equation.
Consider a practitioner with genuine vertical expertise: supply chain, procurement, healthcare operations, industrial technology. That practitioner can now produce research reports, market analysis, buyer intelligence, and curated content at a volume and quality that previously required a full editorial operation. The practitioner provides the framing, the sourcing judgment, and the editorial voice. AI handles the production volume.
The Vertical Intelligence Company I’ve written about in this series fits squarely here. Solo Scale is the business model underneath it.
3. AI-Augmented Professional Services
Law, accounting, financial advisory, and compliance-adjacent services are early-stage Solo Scale territory. Regulatory complexity and liability requirements mean pure automation can’t displace the practitioner. But AI dramatically compresses the time required for the research, drafting, and analysis that underlies professional work.
A specialist attorney who handles a narrow, high-value area of commercial law, and deploys AI agents to handle the research, precedent review, and initial drafting, operates at a leverage ratio that a traditional associate-dependent firm cannot match. Same expertise. Dramatically lower cost structure.
4. Supply Chain and Logistics Intelligence (The Surprising One)
Here’s a category most people aren’t talking about yet. Supply chain consulting has historically required large teams: data analysts, logistics modelers, procurement specialists, demand forecasters. The work is extraordinarily complex. That complexity is also the moat.
A veteran supply chain practitioner: someone who spent twenty years running logistics operations, sourcing organizations, or distribution networks, can now deploy AI agents that monitor supplier risk, model tariff scenarios, track demand signals across markets, and generate procurement recommendations. BCG estimates agentic systems already account for 17% of total AI value in supply chain and are projected to reach 29% by 2028. Supply chain leaders report that 78% anticipate disruptions to intensify over the next two years, but only 25% feel prepared.
That gap is a market. And the practitioner who combines deep operational experience with agentic infrastructure to serve mid-market manufacturers, distributors, and retailers, companies too small to staff an internal supply chain intelligence function, is sitting on a genuine Solo Scale opportunity. The client can be enterprise-scale. The operator doesn’t have to be.
5. Trades and Skilled Work Operations (The Very Surprising One)
This one will raise eyebrows. Solo Scale isn’t just a knowledge economy phenomenon. It extends into the physical economy. Particularly into the operations layer that sits above skilled trades.
Consider the experienced HVAC contractor, the seasoned electrical contractor, the veteran construction project manager. The actual hands-on work requires licensed, skilled tradespeople on-site. But the operations layer: estimating, scheduling, compliance documentation, supplier negotiations, customer communications, change order management, warranty tracking, is all information work. And information work is exactly what agentic AI transforms.
A solo operator with deep trades experience can now run the back office, customer acquisition, and operations management for a services business that employs 10–20 tradespeople in the field, without a team of administrators, estimators, and project coordinators. The leverage point isn’t the work itself. It’s the operations intelligence layer that organizes and monetizes the work.
The trades are facing a documented expertise gap as veteran operators retire. The Solo Scale model lets that expertise be preserved, leveraged, and deployed at scale. This is the physical economy version of the Vertical Intelligence Company.
The Prediction: What Solo Scale Does to the Economy
The internet was supposed to create the creator economy. It did, but only partially. The promise was that anyone with expertise and a laptop could build a scalable business. The reality was messier.
The numbers tell the story. The creator economy was valued at roughly $250 billion in 2024. More than 300 million people worldwide identify as creators. But only 4% earn more than $100,000 annually. More than 50% earn less than $15,000 per year. The top 10% of creators received 62% of ad payments in 2025. The long tail of the creator economy doesn’t produce economic independence. It produces economic fragility.
The bottleneck was always the same: the internet gave everyone distribution, but it didn’t give everyone leverage. Attention was the scarce resource. And attention, unlike expertise, doesn’t compound. It chases novelty. The creator who went viral in 2022 has to go viral again in 2023. The game never ends.
Solo Scale changes the bottleneck. Expertise compounds. Client relationships deepen. Reputation concentrates in narrow domains. A Solo Scale practitioner isn’t competing for attention. They’re deploying knowledge that took decades to accumulate, through infrastructure that didn’t exist until now.
Here’s the prediction: we are about to see the largest wave of high-value small business formation in American history.
The data is already signaling it. Business applications in the US hit 5.62 million in 2025: up 8.2% from 2024, and nearly double the pre-pandemic annual average. In the first four months of 2026, applications are running 17.4% ahead of the same period last year. Solo-founded startups surged from 23.7% of all new ventures in 2019 to 36.3% by mid-2025: a shift that tracks almost precisely with mainstream AI tool adoption. And 47% of respondents in a 2026 Entrepreneur survey said AI availability makes them more likely to start a business.
But this wave will be different from prior entrepreneurial surges in one critical way. It won’t be driven by people selling to consumers. It will be driven by domain experts, veterans of industries, functions, and markets, selling to enterprises. Small businesses at software margins, serving Fortune 500 clients. That combination has never existed at scale before.
The economic implications compound. When a solo practitioner can serve enterprise clients at software margins, several things happen simultaneously. More experienced operators leave large organizations to compete against them. The addressable market for small businesses expands upmarket. Enterprise buyers gain access to specialized expertise they couldn’t previously afford. And the income distribution of entrepreneurship shifts: away from the winner-take-all dynamics of the creator economy, toward the more defensible economics of expertise.
78% of solo businesses currently make under $50,000 annually. The Solo Scale model, executed well, moves that number dramatically. Twenty percent of solopreneurs already earn between $100,000 and $300,000 annually without any employees. AI is early. The ceiling is rising fast.
The long-promised democratization of the economy is happening. It’s just not coming through social media. It’s coming through agentic infrastructure.
A Personal Note
Lest you think I’m only researching and analyzing this trend, I’m living it.
Uphoff Advisory, LLC is a Solo Scale business. In 90 days, as a solo operator, I’ve built a thriving multi-client advisory practice serving organizations that range from fast-growing entrepreneurial ventures to established B2B information brands. The client engagements are substantive. The margin structure looks nothing like a traditional consulting practice. And the AI infrastructure running underneath: research, analysis, content production, web site design and build, business development, is doing work that would have required a team of three to five people a few years ago.
I’m not describing a theory. I’m describing what happened when I built exactly this. Solo Scale indeed.
Why This Is Different From What Came Before
The creator economy taught us that one person could become a media company. Substack. YouTube. Podcasting. The economic unit of production changed. But the economics of creator businesses were still constrained: audience attention was the bottleneck, and monetization was tied to distribution scale.
Solo Scale is different. The bottleneck isn’t audience. It’s expertise. And expertise, unlike audience, is defensible. It compounds. It gets more valuable with specificity, not less.
What Shopify did for merchants, eliminating the infrastructure barrier to selling, agentic AI and vibe coding are doing for expert practitioners. The infrastructure barrier to running a high-leverage services business is collapsing.
The firms that built defensible practices on the old model, that hired in order to scale, that conflated headcount with capability, are not positioned for this shift. The practitioners who built deep domain knowledge and are willing to redesign the delivery model are.
What to Watch
The signal isn’t in the tools. Tools are proliferating everywhere, and most of the noise about AI is tool noise.
The signal is in the business models that start showing up with unusual margin structures. Solo practitioners handling client loads that would have required teams. Boutique advisory firms with economics that don’t match their headcount. Intelligence products delivered by two-person operations that used to require twenty. A trades contractor running a 15-person field operation from a home office.
That’s Solo Scale. And it’s only beginning.
The views expressed in Uphoff on Media are entirely my own. They don’t represent the opinions of any company I’ve led, any board I’ve sat on, or any investor who’s had the pleasure of debating strategy with me over the years. If something I write here sounds brilliant, I’ll take full credit. If it turns out to be wrong, I was clearly misquoted by myself.
“Uphoff on Media” is published by Tony Uphoff, Founder and Managing Partner of Uphoff Advisory, LLC [https://uphoffadvisory.com/]: a strategic advisory practice for founders, CEOs, and investors in B2B information, marketing, and technology. The businesses that drive business.
This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit tonyuphoff.substack.com [https://tonyuphoff.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
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