I Built an AI Agency with 48 Agents (Here's What Actually Works)
Forget hiring. I built a team of 48 AI agents that handle design, coding, content, and research. They work 24/7, don't complain, and cost me less than one junior developer.
Here's the exact setup โ no gatekeeping.
The Problem with Traditional Agencies
I used to outsource everything. Design to one freelancer, coding to another, content to a third. It was expensive, slow, and the quality was inconsistent.
Then I discovered Claude Code and everything changed.
One prompt could spin up specialized agents. But running them manually was tedious. So I automated the entire thing.
My Agent Hierarchy
I didn't just throw 48 agents at random tasks. I built a real agency structure:
๐ญ Frontend Wizard
Turns Figma designs into React components
๐ง Backend Architect
APIs, databases, infrastructure
๐ Content Engine
Blog posts, newsletters, social
๐ Research Team
Market research, competitor analysis
๐จ Design Squad
UI/UX, brand assets, carousels
๐ Deploy Bot
CI/CD, monitoring, alerts
Each agent has a specific role, personality, and set of tools. They don't overlap. They don't confuse each other. They execute.
The Tech Stack
Here's what powers my AI agency:
- Claude Code โ The orchestration layer. 82.7k stars for a reason.
- OpenClaw โ My secret weapon. Handles scheduling, messaging, and memory. 46.4k stars.
- Puppeteer โ Browser automation for rendering and testing.
- Telegram/Discord โ Where my agents deliver their work.
The setup runs on a $20/month VPS. Total cost: less than my coffee budget.
How I Actually Use This
Every morning, I wake up to:
- 3 new blog posts (researched, written, published)
- 2 Instagram carousels (designed, rendered, ready to post)
- A market research report on trending AI tools
- A summary of what my agents built overnight
I don't micromanage. I set the direction once, and they execute until I change it.
Real Example: This Blog Post
I didn't write this. Okay, I did โ but I had help. My research agent pulled the trending repos from GitHub. My content agent suggested the angle. My editing agent cleaned up my rough draft.
What would have taken me 4 hours took 30 minutes.
What Doesn't Work
I made a lot of mistakes getting here:
- Too many agents at once โ Start with 5. Add more only when you understand what they do.
- Vague prompts โ "Make me money" doesn't work. "Write a blog post about X that drives traffic to Y" does.
- No memory โ Without persistence, your agents forget everything. Use a memory layer.
- Manual orchestration โ If you're triggering each agent manually, you're doing it wrong.
The Money Part
Here's what this setup has generated:
- Blog posts drive organic traffic โ leads โ $29 setup guide sales
- Instagram carousels โ followers โ DMs โ consulting inquiries
- Research reports โ content ideas โ products ($4.99 prompt library)
The ROI is stupid. I spend maybe 2 hours a week directing traffic. The agents do the rest.
Getting Started
You don't need 48 agents on day one. Start with this:
- Install Claude Code โ It's free and runs in your terminal.
- Create one agent โ Pick your biggest pain point. Content? Research? Coding?
- Automate it โ Use cron jobs or OpenClaw's scheduler to run it daily.
- Add memory โ Your agent should learn from each run.
- Scale โ Once one agent works, duplicate the pattern.
The goal isn't to build the biggest agent army. It's to have the right agents doing the right things automatically.
What's Next
I'm adding more specialized agents: a sales bot that handles outreach, a legal researcher, and a financial analyst. Each one solves a specific problem I used to hire for.
The future isn't replacing humans. It's augmenting yourself until you can ship at 10x speed.
Want My Exact Setup?
I documented everything in the OpenClaw Ultimate Setup Guide.