I am going to make 5 predictions.
Some of them will make you uncomfortable. Some will seem obvious in hindsight. All of them are backed by data that most people are ignoring right now because most people are too busy looking at what is already big to notice what is about to be.
Save this edition. Come back in 5 years. Tell me I was wrong.
I do not think you will.
PREDICTION 01
AI agents will replace entire business departments, and the people who own the agents will become the new millionaires
Everyone is talking about AI replacing jobs. That is the wrong conversation.
The right conversation is this: who owns the AI that does the work?
Right now, we are at the beginning of a shift from AI as a tool to AI as a workforce. In 2026, AI agents are already handling customer service, content creation, financial analysis, and legal research for companies that used to employ teams of 20.
The AI software market is projected to exceed $800 billion by 2030. But the people who will get truly wealthy from this are not the companies building AI. It is the freelancers, solopreneurs, and small operators who deploy AI agents to run businesses that used to require staff and pocket the margin that used to go to payroll.
A one person agency running 10 AI agents will outcompete a 50 person agency within 5 years. The question is whether you will be the one running the agents or the one being replaced by them.
The new millionaires will not be AI engineers. They will be the people who figure out how to own and operate AI workforces the same way the last generation owned and operated real estate.
PREDICTION 02
Humanoid robots will create the biggest wealth transfer since the internet and almost nobody outside Silicon Valley is paying attention
In 2025, humanoid robotics companies raised $3.2 billion globally, more than the total capital raised in the previous six years combined.
That is not a trend. That is a detonation.
Figure AI, Agility Robotics, Tesla Optimus. These are not science fiction projects. They are companies building physical machines that can stock shelves, assemble cars, care for elderly patients, and deliver packages. The global robotics market is projected to hit $218 billion by 2030 at 17% annual growth.
Here is what nobody is saying: the biggest opportunity is not in building robots. It is in owning the businesses that deploy them. The first restaurant chain to replace its kitchen staff with humanoid robots will not just cut costs. It will run at margins that make every competitor unviable.
Every major labour intensive industry on earth is about to be restructured. The people who see it coming and position their businesses now, even in small ways, will be the ones who look like geniuses in 2031.
PREDICTION 03
Mental health is the next trillion dollar industry and the entrepreneurs who treat it like a business will make a fortune
1 in 8 people on earth currently lives with a diagnosed mental illness. The global mental health market is projected to reach $600 billion by 2030.
Here is the uncomfortable reality: the traditional mental health system is broken. There are not enough therapists. Waitlists are months long. Sessions cost $200 an hour. Insurance covers almost none of it.
That gap between the scale of the problem and the capacity of the current system is one of the largest business opportunities on earth right now. AI powered therapy apps, digital mental health platforms, employer wellness programs, sleep tech, community based support models. Every one of these is in early innings. In 2025, US digital health startups alone raised $14.2 billion, with AI enabled companies capturing 54% of all funding.
The entrepreneur who builds the Spotify for mental health, affordable, accessible, always available, will not just make money. They will be one of the most important businesses of the decade.
Most people see mental health as a social issue. The entrepreneurs who see it as a design problem will be the ones who solve it and profit enormously in the process.
PREDICTION 04
The creator economy is not a trend. It is eating traditional media and the window to own a piece of it is closing faster than most people realise
In 2020, creator economy was a buzzword. In 2026, it is an industry generating over $250 billion annually and it is still in the early stages of eating every traditional media format that existed before it.
Newspapers are dying. Cable TV subscriptions are collapsing. Radio has been replaced by podcasts. Magazines have been replaced by newsletters and YouTube channels. Every single legacy media business is losing audience to individuals who built their own.
But here is the prediction most people miss: the next phase is not individual creators. It is creator owned media companies. The MrBeasts and Morning Brews of today are building what Disney and Conde Nast were in the 20th century, except they own everything, answer to no shareholders, and can pivot overnight.
The most valuable media companies of 2031 do not exist yet. They are being started right now by people who understand that audience is the new real estate and that owning an audience is worth more than owning a building.
The window to build an owned audience from zero is still open. But distribution is getting more competitive every month. The people who start now will look back in five years the same way early YouTube creators look back at 2008.
PREDICTION 05
Space is about to go from a government project to a private gold rush and the real money will not be in rockets
The commercial space economy is projected to hit $1 trillion by 2030.
SpaceX already proved that private companies can do what governments took decades to accomplish and do it cheaper and faster. But SpaceX is the railroad. The real money has always been made not by the company laying the tracks but by the businesses that run on top of them.
Satellite internet is already reshaping connectivity in rural and emerging markets. Earth observation data is being sold to agriculture companies, insurance firms, and governments. Space manufacturing is in its earliest stages. None of this is speculation. All of it has companies already funded and operating.
You do not need to launch a rocket to profit from the space economy. You need to be building businesses that only become possible once cheap satellite internet reaches every corner of the earth, because that moment is 3 years away.
One final thought.
Every single one of these predictions shares the same underlying logic: the biggest opportunities are always hiding inside the biggest problems. Mental health crisis. Labour shortages. Media collapse. Connectivity gaps. The entrepreneurs who look at broken systems and ask how do I build the thing that fixes this are the ones who end up on lists like these in five years.
The question is never whether the opportunity exists. It always does.
The question is whether you will move while most people are still debating whether it is real.
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