If you have an idea
Describe it badly. Ask AI to interview you, sharpen it, name weak spots, and turn it into a first prototype plan.
No-BS AI Camp
Skip the fake classroom. If you have an idea, tell AI and make it help you manifest it. If you do not have an idea, ask AI to find one with you. If you lack a skill, ask AI to teach it. Using AI is the skill.
For young people who want leverage, agency, money ideas, creative momentum, and a real feel for agentic AI.
The actual method
Long conversations are the native interface. Bounce ideas around, ask for market research, ask for prior art, ask for web research, converge on what still feels viable, and then make the model help you build the next version.
Describe it badly. Ask AI to interview you, sharpen it, name weak spots, and turn it into a first prototype plan.
Tell AI your interests, strengths, annoyances, and constraints. Ask it for ten buildable ideas and pick the one that makes you curious.
Use AI to wrap that skill into content, a service, a tool, a tiny product, a workflow, or an agent that helps other people.
Ask AI for a project-based learning path. Learn by making something useful, not by memorizing terms.
Agentic move
Tell AI it is your CEO. Create a researcher, builder, critic, marketer, and operations person. Ask the CEO to research ways you could make money from your interests. The lesson is not the fantasy org chart. The lesson is learning to delegate thinking.
Case files
These are not templates to copy blindly. They are proof that tiny teams and solo operators can now punch far above their headcount when they combine skill, speed, distribution, and AI.
A GLP-1 telehealth company reported as a two-person AI-operated startup: roughly $401M 2025 revenue and a 2026 projection around $1.8B, built with AI tools plus outsourced medical infrastructure.
Solo product builder behind Photo AI and other small internet businesses. Photo AI has been reported around six-figure monthly revenue with a simple, lean stack and relentless shipping.
Indie maker who turned repeated small launches into a portfolio: ShipFast, CodeFast, DataFast, and more. The lesson is speed, distribution, and reusing what you learn.
Danny Postma turned a narrow AI use case into a real business: professional-looking headshots from selfies. The pattern: pick one painful job and make it cheaper, faster, and easier.
Prompt tricks
Generic courses teach definitions. Operators learn phrases that make models behave better: ask for questions first, force concrete next actions, demand evidence, remove flattery, and define success as a completed task.