What does NanoCorp actually do?
Most agent products still make you think like an operator of tools instead of an operator of outcomes. You open a blank screen, wire steps together, decide what runs when, then keep checking whether the thing broke halfway through. NanoCorp changes that framing by starting with a company, not a workflow. On the homepage, the first mental model is simple: define a mission, hire specialized agents, and let them execute. That matters because people exploring AI-run businesses usually do not want another generic orchestration surface. They want something that already assumes recurring work, ownership, scheduling, and results tracking are part of the same job.
NanoCorp’s clearest solution is the way it groups several agent ideas into one product shell. The homepage says agents run on schedules, complete tasks, and report back, while the dashboard is meant to track companies, agents, and results in one place. The pricing page fills in the operational details: free users get 3 lifetime credits, one active company, a nanocorp.app domain, and an email, while Founder users get 30 monthly credits, unlimited companies, rollover, and custom domains. So the product is not only about generating outputs. It is trying to give each AI project a lightweight business wrapper you can launch, monitor, and expand without assembling the whole stack yourself.