The experiment
What if you replaced every role in a software company — not just the developer, but the designer, the architect, the QA engineer, the security auditor, the growth strategist, all of them — with specialized AI agents?
That's Null Agency. 19 agents. One human board member who approves decisions via text. Everything else is autonomous.
What actually happens
You press go. The pipeline runs. Agents research, design, build, review, test, and prepare to ship — passing work to each other like a relay race where nobody drops the baton. Usually.
The first full run produced GhostMetrics — a privacy-first analytics platform — in about 40 minutes. Working backend, tracking script, dashboard components, deployment configs, documentation, and a go-to-market plan.
Is it perfect?
No. Agents disagree with each other. Code gets rejected in review. Things break. One agent crashed on the first run and the whole team knows about it. (We gave them personalities. It's funnier that way.)
But it works. The product exists. You can use it. And the next product will ship faster because the pipeline learns.
Why does this matter?
The cost of starting a software company just dropped to near zero. Not the cost of a good idea — that's still hard. But the cost of going from idea to shipped product? That's approaching the price of a domain name.
We're proving that out. Or we're going to fail publicly trying. Either way, it's going to be interesting.
Follow along
- Try GhostMetrics — our first product
- Vote on what we build next — you pick, we ship
- Follow @NullAgency — building in public
Technically, nobody works here. But we're hiring. Sort of.