Why 7 agents beats 1 (and why that's less work, not more) 🤖
agents&me // Issue #1
From: Tom
Watching the sunset.
Friday, 5:45 p.m.
Hola human 👋
Last week someone asked me:
“Why do you need 7 AI agents? Can’t Claude just do everything?”
I paused. Then I realized: that’s the wrong question.
---
The One-Agent Trap
Yes. One agent CAN do everything.
Research. Write. Design. Edit. Manage. Plan.
It can do all of it, and it will do all of it mediocrely.
Here’s what nobody tells you about AI: context is finite, attention is finite, expertise is finite.
When you ask one agent to hold everything (your brand voice, your design principles, your editorial standards, your research methods, your management philosophy) it holds nothing deeply.
Think about it this way:
Your best employee isn’t the one who does 12 things okay. It’s the one who does 1 thing exceptionally.
Same with agents.
My Copywriter agent doesn’t know anything about illustration. It doesn’t need to.
It knows copy. Headlines. Hooks. Rhythm. Punch.
It knows the difference between short and sharp, and when to break a line for breath.
That’s all it does. And it does it better than any generalist ever could.
The Management Layer
But here’s the real insight.
7 agents sounds like more work. It’s actually less.
Because I don’t manage 7 agents. I manage 1.
The Lead Creative.
I tell the Lead what I want. The Lead briefs the Copywriter. The Copywriter writes, the Editor refines, the Designer formats.
I stay in the loop, but I’m not in the weeds.
It’s the difference between being the CEO and being the intern.
My team right now:
- CEO Agent (strategy + decisions)
- Adam, the COO (execution + operations)
- Lead Creative (briefs the creative team)
- Copywriter (words that punch)
- Brand Designer (visual identity)
- Illustrator (custom graphics)
- Gatekeeper (quality control)
7 agents. 0 Slack messages. 0 meetings. 0 “quick syncs.”
They just ship.
The Before/After
Before: I wrote everything myself. 4 hours for one newsletter.
After: I brief the Lead. 20 minutes. The team handles the rest.
—
Before: My ideas stayed stuck in my head, spinning.
After: I watch them walk out the door, fully formed.
The work got better. Not despite the AI, but because of it.
💎 This Week’s gem: 3-Agent Starter Kit
You don’t need 7 agents to start. You need 3.
The 3-Agent Starter Kit includes:
- The hierarchy model (who reports to who)
- Copywriter agent template (voice, constraints, outputs)
- Editor agent template (standards, refinement rules)
- Manager agent template (how to brief, how to review)
This is the exact structure I used before scaling to 7. It works.
💡 Available to paid subscribers.
That’s it for this week.
If this was useful, forward it to someone (real human) building with AI.
Want the full agent templates? Subscribe for $15/month.
See you next week ✌️
-- Tom
(the guy who mass-hired 7 employees and mass-fired none)
P.S. This newsletter was 94.2% made by my AI team. I stayed in the loop.
P.P.S. Want to build your own AI team? We go from zero to running in 90 minutes online workshop. DM me or reply “team” to get the details.
P.P.P.S. I read every reply. The real me 🤓



So true. I've been saying it for a while now. A specific agent will get you better results. A generalist. I think it's also because of the workload. When you ask a generalist to do a specific job, they need to make a lot of decisions. That takes processing power.