The Operating Week: One Read. One Book. One Pod. One Follow.
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Start Here
LinkedIn just reported a 69% year-over-year surge in people adding “founder” to their profiles.
Nearly half said AI made them more likely to start their own business.
You are not on the fringe.
You’re the leading edge of a structural economic shift.
Here’s what the smartest founders are reading, listening to, and following this week.
- j -
📖 One Article to Read
“Solopreneurs Can Reach $1 Billion In Revenue. New Research Points To AI, Blockchain As Keys” Elaine Pofeldt — Forbes
The single most-shared article in the solopreneur space this year. Pofeldt reports on new research showing that solo founders can now plausibly scale to $1 billion in revenue — using AI, blockchain, and globally distributed teams in categories like automated B2B logistics and algorithmic trading. She names contenders already in the race and dissects which categories of one-person business are most likely to reach this threshold.
This follows her earlier reporting that the number of million-dollar one-person businesses doubled in a single year.
My take: Here’s what this gets right and what it oversimplifies. The structural argument — that AI is compressing the gap between solo operator and scaled enterprise — is real. I saw this compression in reverse when I was running a $75M distribution business. We needed 200+ people to do what certain operators can now approximate with a team of twelve and the right systems. The technology shift is undeniable.
But “plausibly scale to $1 billion” buries an enormous amount of operational reality. The gap between a $500K solo business and a $5M solo business is mostly about systems. The gap between $5M and $50M is about leverage and distribution. The gap between $50M and $1B is about something else entirely, it’s about building infrastructure that operates independently of you, which is the opposite of what makes most solopreneurs great in the first place.
The real insight isn’t that the ceiling has risen. It’s that the floor for a good solo business has risen dramatically. If you’re running a one-person operation at $200K and struggling, the bottleneck isn’t ambition or market opportunity. It’s almost certainly systems and leverage, and both of those have never been cheaper to build.
The first billion-dollar one-person company may already exist. But the more important story is that the first million just got a lot more achievable.
Also worth bookmarking: Zoom’s “The State of Solopreneurship in 2026” — the data-rich landscape report with numbers everyone is quoting: 29.8 million solopreneurs contributing $1.7 trillion to the U.S. economy, 91% saying AI has reduced admin work, 74% scaling without hiring a single employee. Keep this one in your swipe file.
🎧 One Book to Listen To
“The 5 Types of Wealth: A Transformative Guide to Design Your Dream Life” by Sahil Bloom — Audible | Spotify | the5typesofwealth.com
An instant NYT and USA Today Bestseller, narrated by Sahil himself. The framework is deceptively simple: build your life around five types of wealth — Time, Social, Mental, Physical, and Financial. But the power is in how Bloom sequences them.
Most founder content starts with financial wealth and works backward. Bloom inverts that. He argues you design the life first, then build the business to fund it. For anyone who’s left a corporate career or is considering the leap, this isn’t just philosophy — it’s a practical operating system for making the transition sustainable.
Why this matters right now: Burnout is endemic among solopreneurs, and it’s not because the work is too hard. It’s because most people build their business without ever defining what “enough” looks like across the dimensions that actually matter. Bloom’s framework gives you the vocabulary for that conversation — with yourself, with your partner, with the people around you.
Under 7 hours as an audiobook. The kind of listen that reframes your week.
The era of financial-wealth-only thinking is over. This is the operating manual for what comes next.
Also worth a listen: “Creator Capital” by Category Pirates (Nicolas Cole, Eddie Yoon, Christopher Lochhead) — a concise audiobook (under 3 hours) that makes the case for building four types of creator capital: intellectual, social, emotional, and financial. More tactical and creator-economy-specific than Bloom’s book, and a good companion piece if you’re deep in the content-as-business model.
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🎬 One Podcast to Watch
“How to Actually Hit Your Goals in 2026” — My First Million, Episode #773 Sam Parr & Shaan Puri — Apple Podcasts | Spotify | YouTube
My First Million consistently surfaces as the #1 recommended entrepreneurship podcast in every Reddit thread asking what to listen to. This particular episode has circulated heavily into 2026 — but not for the goal-setting frameworks. For the honesty.
There’s a segment where Sam — who has already earned enough to never work again — reads from his own old journal entries and admits he’s been wrestling with the same questions for 15 years. Is the way he’s spending time worth it? Should he go all-in on content or stay behind the scenes? Why can’t he stop building?
Then he says the quiet part out loud: his self-worth is directly correlated to the success of what he’s working on. And he knows it’s a problem. But he can’t untangle it.
Why this matters for you: If you’re building a one-person business, you know this feeling. You know what it’s like to tie your identity to your revenue number, your follower count, your open rate. Everyone talks about the strategy of building. Almost nobody talks about the psychology of sustaining it — what it costs you, what it does to your relationships, what it looks like to build something meaningful without destroying yourself in the process.
Sam’s vulnerability in this episode is worth more than a hundred tactics posts. It’s a masterclass in what the founder journey actually feels like at every stage.
Two guys who’ve already made their millions explain why they can’t stop building — and what that actually costs.
Also worth your time: Greg Isenberg x Sahil Bloom — “Make 2026 the Best Year” on The Startup Ideas Podcast. Bloom walks through his “Personal Annual Review” — seven questions designed to surface what actually creates versus drains your energy. Highly practical, deeply personal, and a perfect complement to the MFM episode above.
👤 One New Person to Follow
Elaine Pofeldt Journalist & Author — Forbes Contributor | Author of The Million-Dollar, One-Person Business(Random House) and Tiny Business, Big Money Follow on: Forbes | LinkedIn | elainepofeldt.com
This is a deliberately contrarian pick. Most “person to follow” recommendations point you toward another creator with a big audience and a course to sell. Pofeldt is a journalist, not an influencer, and that’s exactly why she’s valuable.
She has spent the better part of a decade documenting the rise of million-dollar one-person businesses with actual research, interviews, and data. While most of the solopreneur space runs on aspiration and anecdote, Pofeldt brings the receipts. Her Forbes coverage is now tracking the frontier where AI enables solo operators to reach previously impossible scale — she’s the one producing the billion-dollar solopreneur research that everyone else is citing.
Why she matters for you: Your feed is probably full of operators and creators sharing what worked for them. That’s useful. But it’s also survivorship bias in a feed format. Pofeldt gives you the base rates, the structural trends, and the data underneath the stories. She’s the person who can tell you whether what you’re building is a real business or a lifestyle hobby with good marketing — and she does it without trying to sell you anything.
Follow the person doing the research, not just the people doing the performing.
Also worth following: Greg Isenberg — CEO of Late Checkout, former advisor to Reddit and TikTok, host of The Startup Ideas Podcast. His show has become arguably the fastest-growing pod in the startup/creator space, publishing twice weekly with actionable business ideas listeners actually go and build. Over 540K YouTube subscribers and growing fast. If you want a constant stream of validated, practical business concepts, his feed delivers.
🧵 The Through-Line
If you zoom out on this week’s picks, there’s a single narrative running through all four:
The solopreneur economy just crossed an inflection point. 29.8 million people are contributing $1.7 trillion to the U.S. economy, and the first billion-dollar one-person company may already exist (article). But reaching meaningful scale requires more than ambition — it requires defining what wealth actually means to you, across every dimension of your life (book). The obstacle from there is about sustainability, learning to build without tying your self-worth entirely to your output (podcast).
And the best way to stay sharp?
Follow the people doing real research, not just real-time performance (person).
That arc — landscape → mindset → sustainability → signal — is how the best operators actually think about their week.
See you next Monday.
— John
If this edition was valuable, forward it to one person who’s building something on their own. That’s how Operating grows — one operator at a time.
And if you want to go deeper on the systems behind sustainable building — the stuff behind the curtain, not just the inspiration to start — that’s exactly what we work through together inside Operating Founder.
Weekly live sessions. Real strategy. No fluff.
John Brewton documents the history and future of operating companies at Operating by John Brewton. He is a graduate of Harvard University and began his career as a Phd. student in economics at the University of Chicago. After selling his family’s B2B industrial distribution company in 2021, he has been helping business owners, founders and investors optimize their operations ever since. He is the founder of 6A East Partners, a research and advisory firm asking the question: What is the future of companies? He still cringes at his early LinkedIn posts and loves making content each and everyday, despite the protestations of his beloved wife, Fabiola, at times.




