Interview

Polsia: the 'AI slop' spelled backwards platform that autonomously builds and runs companies for $49/month

Mar 30, 2026 with Ben Broca

Key Points

  • Polsia sells $49/month autonomous AI agents that let solo founders run businesses without hiring teams, handling everything from product development to customer support.
  • Founder argues AI handles roughly 80% of operational work—engineering, support, research, pricing—while humans provide the critical 20%: taste, positioning, and audience.
  • Platform has 500 customers building varied ventures: ad services, AI receptionists, and lead-capture operations for offline businesses seeking to scale without staff.
Polsia: the 'AI slop' spelled backwards platform that autonomously builds and runs companies for $49/month

Summary

Polsia — 'AI slop' spelled backwards, intentionally — is a $49/month platform that lets individual entrepreneurs build and operate businesses using autonomous AI agents. The name came from the founder's lawyer asking for a company name; he was on his couch, thought of 'pulsate in reverse,' and filed it. The product came later, built in November after the company was incorporated in April.

The use cases on the platform are varied: one user built an ad-creation service that takes a script and autonomously produces ads via third-party APIs, with paying customers. Another built an AI receptionist for small businesses using an agent SDK. Existing offline businesses are using Polsia to build landing pages, run lead capture, and execute ad campaigns without hiring a team.

The 80/20 argument

The founder's core pitch is that AI can automate roughly 80% of day-to-day operational work — engineering, customer support, market research, pricing — but the remaining 20% still requires a human. That 20% is taste: branding, positioning, understanding what's trending, and having even a small audience to sell to. His example is pointed: a creator with 1,000 dedicated followers doesn't need much more infrastructure to get 10 to 30 paying customers and generate income.

The longer-term vision is a tighter feedback loop where agents run autonomously overnight, waking up to do work without human input, with users paying for the compute cycles. That model works only when user feedback is continuously fed back into the service to improve it. The founder frames this as an opportunity for people with capital to run multiple compounding businesses simultaneously — and ultimately wants to extend that to the 99% who think AI begins and ends with ChatGPT.

At $49/month, the platform is priced to attract experimentation. The comparison to the low-code/no-code wave of the early 2020s is fair — Polsia sits on the more automated end of that continuum, but the founder is clear this is not a get-rich-quick product. Building real businesses takes time to ramp.