A solo founder uses AI to run three companies, proving one person businesses are reshaping modern entrepreneurship.
The most disruptive business trend of this decade does not have a headquarters. It is the one person business, powered by artificial intelligence, and it is quietly rewriting who gets to build companies in America. It is changing not only how companies are built, but who feels empowered to build them in the first place. To understand where it is going, look at Lisa Haven.
Haven, a Boca Raton entrepreneur and mother of three daughters, runs three companies at the same time: VIXA, an artificial intelligence dating clarity app launching in late July, Havenly, a beauty brand built for global retail shelves, and LUMAPROMPT.AI, a premium prompt platform for women. No employees. No investors. One founder. What once would have required a team of specialists now operates through a single vision, supported by intelligent systems.
The New Math of Building a Company
A decade ago, this portfolio would have required staff, outside capital, and months of coordination across departments. Today, artificial intelligence fills those seats. For Haven it works as a research analyst when vetting manufacturers, a first draft copywriter, a contract reviewer before the lawyer sees a document, and a strategist late at night when her house goes quiet. It helps her move faster, test ideas sooner, and iterate without waiting on others.
The judgment, the standards, and the vision remain hers. The machine simply multiplies the hours and compresses the timeline. What used to take weeks can now happen in days, sometimes hours.
That is the quiet revolution of the one person business: overhead collapsed, and ambition did not.
Radical Transparency as a Business Model
What separates Haven from the wave of founders now working this way is that she documents everything in public on her blog, including the genuine failures. Work she paid for that never arrived. Launches that slipped. Plans that fell apart and were rebuilt by morning. She shares not just outcomes, but the messy middle that most founders hide.
“I am not afraid of failing,” she writes. “I believe in myself, and failure is part of the process, not the opposite of it.”
The record matters, she argues, because polished success stories keep people on the sidelines, while proof gets them building. Her readers do not just watch the empire go up. They get the blueprint, including the exact artificial intelligence tools she uses and free tools and templates they can apply the same day. In doing so, she is not just building companies, she is lowering the barrier for others to follow.

What It Means for Everyone Else
The barriers that once decided who could be a founder, including capital, connections, and headcount, are falling at once. Technology has shifted leverage back to the individual. Haven’s message to the people watching, especially women building lives around families, is direct: a person with children, faith, and a laptop is no longer at a disadvantage.
Start before you are ready. Document everything. Correct as you go. The path is no longer linear, and perfection is no longer required to begin.
The one person business is not a trend to watch. It is already here, quietly scaling in homes, coffee shops, and late-night work sessions across the country.
About the Founder
Lisa Haven is a Boca Raton entrepreneur and mother of three daughters building three companies: VIXA, an artificial intelligence dating clarity app launching in late July, Havenly, a Gen Z beauty brand built for global retail shelves, and LUMAPROMPT.AI, a premium human authored prompt platform for women. She documents the whole journey, wins and corrections included, at lisahaven.co.
