Some companies run on spreadsheets and a server closet. Some run on AI agents that do real work. This guide shows you where you actually stand, and the fastest path up.
Jump to an ageIt's a classic strategy game: a few villagers, a world covered in fog, and a race to advance through the ages. Business works the same way.
Your company is living in one right now. It's defined by the tools you actually use, not the year on the calendar.
The cloud is built. The integrations exist. The AI agents work. Everything you're not using was proven years ago, by someone else.
Nobody skips ages, and most companies run two behind without realizing it. Every age was right when you entered it. The world just moved.
So: four ages. Let's find yours.
Want the full thinking behind this? Read the essay: Every Business Is Playing Age of Empires.
Spreadsheets shared by email, an office server, and knowledge that lives in people's heads.
Feels safe: everything is close enough to touch. But nothing compounds: knowledge stays in heads, and the business is one retirement away from losing a process forever.
Not with AI. Start with foundations: files into shared cloud storage, key processes written down. Boring, and the prerequisite for everything else on this page.
Off-the-shelf SaaS, cloud files, and spreadsheets doing double duty.
This is where most companies live. The machines are modern; the assembly line between them is people. It works, and that's the trap. It just doesn't scale without hiring.
Integration, not more software: make your systems talk to each other, pick one source of truth per domain, and let spreadsheets go back to being calculators.
Connected systems, one source of truth, work that moves itself.
Honestly? Not much. This is where compounding starts. But everything still runs at the speed of human attention: systems hold the work, people do every step.
You already have the prerequisites. Next: put AI inside the shared workflow. Agents do the multi-step work between systems you've already connected, with your team supervising.
Agents in the workflow, software built around the team.
Almost nobody is fully here, including most who say they are. The first companies to arrive in each industry set the cost structure everyone else competes against.
The constraint is no longer technology. It's how fast your people and processes absorb what already works. A much better problem to have.
The technologies that define each age, and the year each became normal for companies your size. Nothing here is experimental. The only gap is who's using it.
Starting technology. Everyone begins here.
Buy tools. Rent instead of build.
Connect the tools. One truth per domain.
Put AI inside the work itself.
Sixteen statements. Check every box that's true for you.
Companies don't skip ages, but they can move through them absurdly fast now. The tools are proven, the path is known. It takes order, not heroics.
You can't leave an age you haven't located. Map how work actually moves today, not how the org chart says it does. That's the first weeks of a Jumpstart.
Prerequisites first: files out of inboxes, knowledge out of heads, systems talking to each other. AI bolted onto Stone Age process just automates the chaos.
Advance one workflow first, with a working prototype on your real work, not a slide deck about the future. Momentum does the rest.