Finding The Right One-Person Business For You

Why solopreneurship isn’t one path — it’s at least fifteen

I get asked some version of this question constantly: “I want to start a one-person business, but I have no idea what kind.” It’s a good question, and it deserves a better answer than “follow your passion.” Passion is a starting point, not a strategy.

Here’s the thing most people get wrong about solopreneurship. They treat it like a single destination — as if “starting your own thing” is one job description with one shape. It isn’t. A solo consultant and a solo product builder live in almost entirely different worlds, with different skills, different risk profiles, and different daily lives. Picking the wrong shape for your personality is why so many promising solopreneurs burn out in year one — not because the idea was bad, but because the format was wrong for them.

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America’s Missing Piggy Bank: The Case For and Against a US Sovereign Wealth Fund

Every major economy is building a war chest for the future. The United States — the wealthiest nation in history — doesn’t have one. That might be the strangest gap in American economic policy.

What the Rest of the World Already Figured Out

Norway’s sovereign wealth fund now holds over $2 trillion in assets — roughly $390,000 for every Norwegian citizen. It was built by doing something simple and disciplined: every time Norway pumped oil out of the North Sea, it saved a chunk of the proceeds, invested them globally, and left the money alone. Last year alone, the fund generated a profit of $248 billion, posting a 15% annual return. It now funds nearly a quarter of Norway’s entire national budget — not through taxes, but through returns on invested wealth.

Saudi Arabia has one. Singapore has one. Abu Dhabi has one. China has one. Even tiny New Mexico has one, funded by oil royalties, quietly compounding for decades. The Trump administration called for the establishment of a US sovereign wealth fund by early 2026, and the idea has been floating around Washington in various forms since the 2008 financial crisis. Yet as of today, no formal fund exists, Congress hasn’t authorized one, and the debate over whether it should has become one of the more fascinating — and revealing — arguments in American economic policy.

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The Phantom Fleet: What Happens When 250 Million Cars Disappear

A thought experiment in shared mobility reveals just how much of America’s car fleet exists purely to sit still

The Math Problem Hiding in Plain Sight

Here’s a question worth sitting with: the average car in America is parked about 95% of the time. It sits in a driveway overnight, sits in an office lot all day, and sits in a garage on weekends. So what happens if we replace that ownership model with an on-demand fleet — summon a car, ride it, release it to the next person?

Researchers have actually run this simulation, city by city, using real trip data. A study of an autonomous valet-style service found that a fleet of just 2,300 vehicles could replace the entire private car fleet of a mid-sized European city — a twelve-fold reduction. Berlin researchers found automated vehicles could meet the same demand with a fleet roughly 10% the size of the conventional car fleet. A broader review estimated shared fleets could serve a population with about one-third the number of vehicles currently on the road, and Seoul modeling projected more than an 80% reduction in vehicles needed.

Take a conservative middle estimate — a 75% reduction — and apply it to America’s roughly 280 million registered vehicles. We’d need somewhere between 30 and 70 million cars to do the same job. That means somewhere around 200 to 250 million vehicles currently exist mostly as standby equipment.

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When Big Tech Goes Shopping for Diplomas

Why hyperscaler IPO cash and the college collapse may be on a collision course

By Futurist Thomas Frey

A Pattern We’ve Seen Before

I’ve been watching two trendlines converge for months, and the collision point is starting to look obvious. On one side, the hyperscalers — Amazon, Microsoft, Google, and now the AI labs themselves like Anthropic and OpenAI — are either already public or racing toward IPOs that could mint hundreds of billions in fresh capital. On the other side, American higher education is entering what demographers have been warning about for two decades: the “enrollment cliff.” More than 100 colleges are currently flagged as being at elevated risk of closing or merging, with Fitch Ratings issuing a “deteriorating” outlook for the sector for the second consecutive year. Sixteen nonprofit colleges announced closures in 2025, matching the 2024 total, with another eight announcing closures in just the first quarter of 2026.

So here’s the question I keep coming back to: when an industry is sitting on a mountain of fresh IPO cash, and another industry is collapsing under the weight of bad demographics and worse balance sheets, what happens next? History gives us a pretty clear answer — somebody with money goes shopping.

This isn’t a wild leap. We’ve watched this movie before, just with different props. When Jeff Bezos bought The Washington Post in 2013, he wasn’t buying a newspaper — he was buying a 136-year-old brand, a trusted distribution channel, and a built-in audience, all for the relatively modest price of $250 million. When Elon Musk bought Twitter, he wasn’t just buying a social network — he was buying a real-time information utility he could bend toward his own platform ambitions.

In both cases, a tech billionaire looked at a struggling legacy institution and saw something the balance sheet didn’t capture: brand equity, infrastructure, and a captive audience that would take decades to build from scratch.

Now look at a mid-tier private college. On paper, it’s a failing business — declining enrollment, a tiny endowment, maybe a “going concern” warning from its auditors. Anna Maria College’s FY2025 audit carried exactly that kind of qualification, which triggered new federal financial aid restrictions and preceded its closure decision by just weeks. But strip away the financial distress and what’s left? A regionally accredited degree-granting charter. A physical campus with dorms, labs, fiber connectivity, and often surplus land. A built-in pipeline of 1,000 to 3,000 students. And — this is the part that matters most — the legal authority to grant degrees, something that takes years and mountains of bureaucracy to obtain from scratch.

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A Morning Inside the Mind of a Futurist — Where Every Question Leads to a Drone

A stream-of-consciousness journey through the AI-controlled skies of our immediate future

By Futurist Thomas Frey


Every morning begins the same way — in that warm, blurry corridor between sleep and awareness where the best thinking happens and no alarm clock is welcome.

The transition from dream-state to conscious thought is never clean. Ideas arrive half-formed, like signals from a frequency that only tunes in clearly for a few minutes before the day crowds them out. This morning, before my feet touch the floor, a single question presents itself with unusual clarity:

Who — or what — is actually in control of the drones?

That question alone will occupy the next hour of my thinking. Maybe longer.

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Memorial Gardens — Where the Living Come to Remember, and Communities Come Alive

How a simple idea about rocks in a park became a blueprint for healing the loneliness of modern life


Every cemetery tells you that someone was here. A name, two dates, a hyphen between them that holds an entire life.

But what if we could do something more than mark the departure? What if we could create spaces that keep the living connected to those who came before — spaces that breathe, bloom, and change with the seasons — places where grief and joy share the same bench, where strangers become neighbors, and where the stories of ordinary people are woven permanently into the landscape of a city?

That is the quiet, radical promise of the memorial garden. And we need it more than we may realize.

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We Have Already Passed Peak Car — And Most People Missed It

A column on the quiet death of automobile culture and the mobility revolution already underway

Here is a question worth sitting with: what if the single most transformative shift in transportation history happened without a press release, without a ribbon-cutting ceremony, and without most of us noticing?

That is exactly what occurred. The global market for internal combustion passenger vehicles quietly peaked in 2017 — and according to the International Energy Agency, has since fallen by 30%. The car as the centerpiece of modern civilization is beginning a long, slow exit. We have arrived at Peak Car.

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When the Business Model Itself Becomes the Invention

By Futurist Thomas Frey

Peter Diamandis and Salim Ismail have a name for what is happening to organizations right now. They call it the Organizational Singularity — the point at which AI agents, AI-native workflows, and recursive self-improvement restructure companies faster than traditional hierarchy can adapt. It is not a future event. According to Ismail, it is already underway, and the companies that survive it will be one hundred times more performant than the ones that don’t.

One hundred times. Not ten percent better. Not twice as productive. One hundred times.

That number should reframe every conversation happening in boardrooms, city halls, and small business back offices right now. Because it means the question is no longer whether to adapt. It is whether you can adapt fast enough to remain relevant at all.

The Organizational Singularity doesn’t ask for your permission. It asks for your attention — and it is running out of patience.

Five business model developments from just this past week reveal exactly how the singularity is already reshaping the architecture of value creation. Taken together, they are not isolated experiments. They are the early structure of the economy that replaces the one we currently inhabit.

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12 Laws of the Future

By Futurist Thomas Frey

I have spent decades doing something my colleagues find equal parts fascinating and slightly unhinged: I treat the future as a living force. Not a destination. Not a deadline. A force — as real and as powerful as gravity, as indifferent to our preferences as a river deciding which way to run.

People ask me all the time why anyone should study something that hasn’t happened yet. My answer is always the same. You are going to spend the rest of your life in the future. That alone seems like sufficient reason to understand how it works.

What follows are twelve laws I have developed over decades of watching the future arrive. They are not predictions. They are operating principles — the physics of what is coming, whether we are ready or not.

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The Trust Stack: Why Confidential Computing Plus Sovereign AI Is the Infrastructure Category Nobody Has Built Yet

By Futurist Thomas Frey

The Intersection of Swiss Neutrality, Hardware-Level Privacy, and Regulated Industry Demand Is Pointing at a Multi-Billion Dollar Gap in the Global AI Infrastructure Market

The hyperscalers built for scale. Nobody has built for trust. That gap is now large enough to found a category on.

There is a conversation happening in the boardrooms of European banks, Gulf sovereign wealth funds, Asian healthcare ministries, and defense agencies on every continent, and it sounds roughly like this: we understand that AI is going to be central to our competitive position, our operational efficiency, and our national capability. We also understand that we cannot put our most sensitive data — patient records, financial positions, defense intelligence, proprietary models — into infrastructure we do not control, governed by laws we are not subject to, processed in facilities we cannot audit, by companies whose first obligation is to a foreign government’s legal process. We want the capability. We cannot accept the dependency. Tell us what to do.

Right now, nobody has a complete answer. That is the gap. And in infrastructure terms, an unanswered question at that scale and with that level of institutional demand is not a problem. It is a category waiting to be built.

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The Future Is Already in Motion – Part 4: The Futurist as Signal Reader

What Separates the People Who See What’s Coming From Everyone Else

By Futurist Thomas Frey

Everything This Series Has Been Building Toward

Over the past three columns, we have traveled from the edge of the observable universe to the fluid dynamics of Earth’s molten core to the birth rate statistics of countries whose demographic futures are already sealed. We have watched gravitational waves carry billion-year-old messages across the cosmos, tracked magnetic poles accelerating toward Siberia on a schedule no human authority can renegotiate, and traced the consequences of two bullets fired in Sarajevo in 1914 still propagating through geopolitical institutions today.

The through-line connecting every signal in this series is the same: the future is not an empty space awaiting our decisions. It is a populated space, already in motion, already carrying consequences, already transmitting at frequencies ranging from the subatomic to the civilizational. The question this final column addresses is both the most practical and the most personal in the series: what does it actually mean to be a reader of those signals? What do the people who see what’s coming do differently from everyone else? And in an age when artificial intelligence can process more data than any human mind will ever hold, what remains irreplaceably human about the act of genuine foresight?

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The Future Is Already in Motion – Part 3: The Human Waves

Election Cycles, Demographic Tides, Economic Long Waves — The Social Future Is Already in the Numbers

By Futurist Thomas Frey

One Shot in Sarajevo

On the morning of June 28, 1914, a nineteen-year-old Bosnian Serb nationalist named Gavrilo Princip stepped off a curb in Sarajevo and fired two shots at a passing car. The first struck Archduke Franz Ferdinand, heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne. The second struck his wife, Sophie. Both were dead within the hour.

What followed from those two bullets is almost impossible to hold in a single frame of comprehension. Within six weeks, the major powers of Europe were at war. By November 1918, when the guns finally stopped, 20 million people were dead, four empires had collapsed, the map of Europe had been redrawn from scratch, and the conditions had been set — the humiliation of Germany, the punishing terms of Versailles, the economic chaos of the 1920s — for the rise of Adolf Hitler, the Second World War, the Holocaust, the Cold War, the founding of Israel, the partition of Korea, the creation of the modern Middle East, and the geopolitical architecture that still shapes the world you woke up in this morning.

Two bullets. One morning. A century of consequences still propagating.

This is the butterfly effect made historically concrete, and it illustrates the third category of signal this series is tracing: the human waves. Not cosmic. Not geological. But social, demographic, economic, and political forces already in motion — already set, already traveling, already carrying consequences that will arrive whether or not we have built instruments to receive them.

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