Lenny's PodcastEvery CEO Dan Shipper: Why no one on his team manually codes
Engineers ship specs and reviews while Claude Code, Cursor, and Gemini write the lines; a Head of AI Operations turns weekly workflows into prompts and agents.
At a glance
WHAT IT’S REALLY ABOUT
Inside an AI-Native Startup: Products, Processes, And People Supercharged
- Lenny interviews Dan Shipper, co-founder and CEO of Every, an AI-native company that runs a daily newsletter, multiple SaaS products, and a consulting arm with just 15 people. Every’s product engineers no longer hand-write code, instead orchestrating agents like Claude Code and other tools to build and ship software. Internally, they’ve restructured work around AI, including a Head of AI Operations, agent libraries, and “compounding engineering” practices that make each project faster than the last. Dan also shares his broader worldview: AI as a force for reshoring jobs, the rise of “model managers” and generalists, and concrete patterns he’s seeing inside large companies that successfully adopt AI.
IDEAS WORTH REMEMBERING
5 ideasHire a Head of AI Operations to systematically automate work.
Every has a dedicated AI ops lead who sits with leaders weekly, identifies repetitive workflows, and turns them into prompts, agents, and automations—freeing the rest of the team from having to context-switch into ‘automation mode’ themselves.
Shift engineers from hand-coding to managing agents that write code.
On Every’s product team, engineers now focus on crafting PRDs, prompts, and reviews while agents like Claude Code and tools like Codex/Cursor generate and modify code; humans still review PRs and occasionally dive deeper, but typing the code is no longer the core job.
Practice “compounding engineering” so each task makes future tasks cheaper.
Instead of treating each feature or spec as one-off work, Every’s engineers continually build reusable prompts, slash-commands, and internal tools (e.g., PRD generators, copy-editing pipelines) so every new project benefits from prior effort and gets faster over time.
Use AI internally first, then unbundle successful workflows into products.
Every prototypes new ideas by aggressively using general-purpose models (ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini) for their own needs—email triage, writing, file cleanup, content automation—then spins the most valuable, repeatedly used workflows into standalone apps like Cora, Sparkle, and Spiral.
CEO usage of AI is the strongest predictor of company-wide adoption.
In Every’s consulting work, the organizations that see real productivity gains almost always have a CEO who personally uses ChatGPT/Claude daily, sets realistic expectations, and visibly drives the cultural shift (e.g., “we’re AI-first” memos, sharing prompts, usage dashboards).
WORDS WORTH SAVING
5 quotesNo one is manually coding anymore.
— Dan Shipper
Whenever I see a kid with ChatGPT, I'm like, 'Holy shit. They're gonna go so much faster than any other person that I've worked with.'
— Dan Shipper
Organizations like ours—people who are playing at the edge—we're doing things that in, like, three years everybody else is gonna be doing.
— Dan Shipper
A good definition of AGI is when it becomes economically profitable for people to run agents indefinitely.
— Dan Shipper
Every time I've kind of just leaned into something that feels like the ultimate luxury of my secret desire, it's actually worked a lot better.
— Dan Shipper
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