Startups Weekly AI News
January 12 - January 20, 2026AI Agents Are Helping Startups Do More With Less
Startups usually face a tough problem: they need lots of workers to grow, but they don't have enough money to pay them. For years, this stopped many small companies from becoming big. However, AI agents are changing this completely. These smart computer helpers can do jobs that used to need real people sitting at desks. They can answer customer questions 24 hours a day, write emails to find new customers, organize data, and help with many other tasks.
One great example is a company called MyUser, created by founder Ibrahim Hasanov. He built this entire company by himself, with zero employees other than himself. MyUser helps other startups find customers by using AI to research people and send personalized emails. Hasanov proved that one person with good AI tools can build something really valuable. He even used his own product to grow his company—he sent AI-powered emails to find his first customers. This shows how powerful these new AI tools have become.
Small Startups Can Now Offer Big Company Services
Before AI agents, a two-person startup could never offer the same service as a huge company like Apple or Walmart. Today, that's changing. AI-driven chatbots and virtual assistants now let tiny startups provide 24/7 customer support just like Fortune 500 companies do. This means small startups can compete in areas where only big companies could afford to operate before.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has said something bold: we might soon see a billion-dollar company (a company worth one billion dollars!) that only has a single employee. Just a few years ago, nobody would have believed this was possible. But with AI agents handling so much work, it's becoming realistic.
Shopping and Selling Online Is Changing Too
Two huge areas where AI agents are making a big difference are shopping and selling things online. Agentic commerce is a new way where AI agents help people find and buy products without ever leaving a chatbot. Companies like Google, Shopify, and Microsoft are working together to make this easier.
Shopify, one of the biggest platforms where people sell things online, just announced something called "Renaissance" that focuses on agentic commerce. This lets products show up inside conversations on popular AI chatbots like ChatGPT and Perplexity. A customer can chat with an AI, see products right there in the conversation, and buy them without leaving the chat. During 2025, Shopify saw seven times more traffic from AI and 11 times more orders from AI shoppers.
Google also announced something called the Universal Commerce Protocol that helps AI agents shop across different websites. This means an AI helper can buy from Walmart, Shopify, Etsy, and Target all using the same system, without needing special connections for each store.
New AI Agent Tools Arrived This Month
Salesforce, the company that owns Slack (a popular work messaging app), released a new version of Slackbot that works as an AI agent. This isn't just a chatbot that answers questions—it's an intelligent assistant that can do work. The new Slackbot can find information, write emails, schedule meetings, and connect to other work tools like Google Drive and Microsoft Teams. Workers can stay in Slack and get things done without jumping between many different apps.
Anthropicintroduced something called Cowork, which is designed for everyday people (not just computer programmers) to use AI as a helpful agent. With Cowork, you can tell Claude (an AI made by Anthropic) which folder on your computer to access, and it can read files, edit them, create new ones, organize things, or write reports. This makes AI agents useful for regular office work that millions of people do.
Why This Matters for Startups
AI agents are leveling the playing field between small startups and big companies. A startup founder can now build software, do market research, create websites, and find customers—all with AI helping them. This was almost impossible just two years ago without spending tons of money on hiring.
Companies are also making sure these AI tools work well together. Google's Universal Commerce Protocol and other new standards mean different AI agents can work smoothly with each other. This helps startups use AI tools that talk to each other instead of fighting all the time.
As we move through 2026, more startups will probably use these AI agents to grow faster with smaller teams. The biggest change might be that the size of your team doesn't determine how much you can accomplish anymore—the quality of your AI helpers matters more than ever before.