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Agency vs Freelancer: Who Should Build Your Japan Site?

by | 2026-05-08 | Business

In May 2025, at Anthropic’s developer conference Code with Claude in San Francisco, CEO Dario Amodei predicted the arrival of the one-person billion-dollar company, built by an individual using AI. He put the odds at 70% to 80%, and said it could happen as soon as 2026. The claim sent a real ripple through the US startup world.

It is not a distant story for a US company entering Japan, because website production fits the conditions Amodei described almost exactly, and the old model of writing a large check to a big agency is already aging out. One caveat matters, though: not everyone qualifies as a one-person operation. Only a senior specialist who combines deep digital-marketing understanding with practical, hands-on AI mastery can outperform a multi-person team. This article makes the case, with industry data and real examples.

The One-Person Company Era, in Anthropic's Own Words

Solo professional working with AI assistants on a laptop, the arrival of the one-person company era
At that same conference, when Mike Krieger, Anthropic’s CPO and an Instagram co-founder, asked whether one person could build a billion-dollar company with AI, Amodei answered that it would certainly happen, possibly within a year. In a later press session he framed the probability as 70% to 80%.

What is worth noting is the kind of industries Amodei named as friendly to a one-person company: proprietary trading, developer tools, and businesses that can automate customer service. The common thread is low dependence on human, organizational process, where an individual’s judgment and AI’s execution translate directly into results. Website production fits that description. Krieger added that, having built a billion-dollar company in Instagram with 13 people, the idea did not strike him as crazy, and noted that the main reason Instagram needed to scale headcount was content moderation. Without that, two founders and AI could have run it. That view from the top of the industry applies just as well to knowledge-intensive website production.

In Website Production, Judgment Beats Manpower

Glowing lightbulb surrounded by skill icons, strategic judgment outweighing manpower in website production
What decides quality in a website is not the number of pages or the volume of hours. It is the quality of the strategic calls: which keywords to pursue, which search intent to prioritize, how your brand voice should sound natural and trustworthy in Japanese, and how to handle AEO, GEO, and LLMO. Those judgments decide roughly 90% of the outcome.

And that kind of integrated judgment can only come from someone who understands digital marketing across the board. Assemble a person who only knows SEO, a person who only knows design, and a person who only knows writing, and you do not get integrated judgment. You get the classic multi-person failure: each one optimizes their own slice, so the result is locally correct but globally contradictory. When a single senior specialist who can see every axis, SEO, AEO, GEO, LLMO, content strategy, Japanese localization, UX, analytics, and operations, is the one making the calls, every choice is bound together by one consistent strategy. In the AI era, what matters is not the amount of manpower but whether you can produce that consistent judgment. This is the real reason a one-person operation has the edge.

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Why a Multi-Person Team Can't Have the Deep Conversation

Chalkboard mapping design, analytics and marketing roles, the layers that keep agency teams from deep conversation
So why does a large agency’s multi-person team struggle to produce that consistent judgment? The answer is simple. The contact you speak with and the person actually writing the code are different people, with translators, directors, and agency strategists layered in between. In that structure, the essential discussion, what your win path in Japan is and how your brand should sound in Japanese, fragments as it passes through the telephone game. Each contributor optimizes their own area, and no one ends up holding the judgment that ties the whole strategy together. The economic side of this, the outsourcing ratios and agency margins, is covered in how to choose a web development company for Japan. The point here is the cognitive flaw instead: nobody has the whole picture.

What ultimately separates a successful website from a failed one is whether every area connects inside one person’s head. A multi-person team, by its structure, cannot make that happen.

The Real Edge: Expertise Multiplied by AI Mastery

Hands holding a glowing network of AI prompts, senior expertise multiplied by AI mastery
So why does one senior consultant who understands digital marketing and has mastered AI surpass a multi-person team? Two reasons are decisive.

  • Integrated judgment across every axis. The genuinely hard part of website production is binding many axes, SEO, AEO, GEO, LLMO, content, Japanese localization, design, technical build, and operations, under one consistent strategy. A team of assembled specialists holds no single integrated view. When one specialist who knows all of it makes the calls, strategic consistency is guaranteed.
  • AI mastery that turns expertise into execution. The productivity gap between someone who has used AI and someone who builds with Claude Code, Cursor, Figma AI, Perplexity, and other AI agents in daily practice is now an order of magnitude. A Figma 2025 AI report found 78% of developers and designers felt AI improved efficiency, while only 40% of designers felt it improved quality. AI raises speed, but quality depends on the human’s judgment. Used without expertise, AI just mass-produces weaker output. Only when expertise and AI mastery multiply together does AI become a real weapon.

That multiplication is what creates the underlying advantage. There is also a problem a multi-person team cannot structurally solve, and the next idea explains it.

Amdahl's Law: Why Teams Hit a Ceiling

Team meeting over stacks of documents, the coordination bottleneck Amdahl's Law predicts
Amdahl’s Law, proposed by computer scientist Gene Amdahl in 1967, describes parallel processing with a simple principle: speed up one part of a process and the part you did not speed up becomes the bottleneck for the whole. Amodei himself has pointed to this concept as applying to organizational design in the AI era. Map it onto a team and the implication is sharp. Even if AI makes each individual task 10 times faster, the human coordination, the meetings, handoffs, and telephone game, does not speed up, so total throughput rises only about twofold. A one-person operation carries zero coordination overhead by structure, so expertise and AI execution flow straight to the result with no bottleneck in the way.

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It's Already Proven in the Market

Solo specialist working across laptop and tablet, the one-person model already proven in the market
The advantage of one person plus AI is not theory. It is already visible in the developer-tools world. Bolt, an AI code-generation startup, reportedly went from 0 to 20 million dollars in annualized revenue in just 2 months. Cursor reached 500 million dollars in annualized revenue with 50 people. The solopreneur pioneer Pieter Levels runs a business turning over more than 3 million dollars a year with zero employees. A Carta report found the share of solo founders among US startups jumped from 23.7% in 2019 to 36.3% in the first half of 2025. The common thread is the same two things: founders who hold deep domain knowledge and who use AI at the level of real implementation. The same structure now applies, point for point, to building and running a website.

How to Vet a Solo Specialist: 5 Criteria

Digital marketing dashboard guided by an AI hand, five criteria for vetting a solo specialist
Not every freelancer or one person agency is strong, and not every solo operator clears the bar. Whether you are comparing a japanese seo company, a japan web design company, or an independent specialist, the thing that matters most is the combination of deep digital-marketing understanding and real AI mastery. Use these 5 criteria to judge it.

  • Direct dialogue and direct contract. The person you talk to must be the person doing the work. Rule out multi-layer subcontracting structures.
  • Real Japan-market digital-marketing experience. Translating your home-market instincts straight into Japanese does not work in Japan. Hands-on experience winning customers locally is essential.
  • Cross-cutting SEO, AEO, GEO, and LLMO strategy. The judgment that integrates search intent with brand is what decides whether the site succeeds.
  • Daily, implementation-level AI mastery. Not has used AI, but produces results with Claude Code, Cursor, and AI agents built into real work.
  • Outcome-based or package contracts. A commitment to what gets achieved, rather than stacked hours, is a healthy signal of a partner who has left the old model behind.

Few individuals meet all 5, which is exactly why finding one is so valuable.

Cheap, High-Quality, and Fast, All at Once

Businessman touching an AI chip above a rising chart, low cost, high quality and speed at once
Pull the structure together in terms of value for money. On cost, you cut the margin that would otherwise flow through an agency’s layers of subcontracting, so your spend goes entirely into real strategy, build, and operation (see website localization cost for Japan). On quality, the partial-optimization trap and the telephone-game dilution of strategy simply do not occur, because every decision passes through one senior specialist and stays consistent, which is how you end up with a Japanese site that actually generates inquiries. On speed, being free of Amdahl’s Law shortens the cycle from strategy to build to improvement dramatically, with market analysis, keyword research, and competitive analysis that once took a person-month finishing in 2 to 3 days.

Cheap, high-quality, and fast, at the same time, is the core advantage of a solo specialist who pairs digital-marketing expertise with AI mastery. A multi-person team cannot satisfy all three at once by its very structure. This is the heart of the agency vs freelancer decision in the AI era: it is no longer about size, it is about who holds the judgment.

This is how we work. At JU Marketing, you deal directly with one senior bilingual specialist, based in Texas, who directs SEO, AEO, GEO, content strategy, Japanese localization, build, and operation from end to end, with no team to coordinate and no handoffs to lose quality in. Compared with hiring such a person in-house, which would mean a six-figure US salary plus recruiting, training, and management, and finding someone bilingual and fluent in the Japan market on top of that, engaging a specialist who already has all of it puts that capability on your side as a member of your team, without the organizational overhead. If you are planning a Japanese website build, the build service and a free consultation are the place to start.

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About JU Marketing

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JU Marketing is an AI-first, senior bilingual practice helping US companies win in the Japanese market, from website build and localization to content and paid advertising. We combine AI fluency with deep Japan-market experience so your site performs across Google Japan, Yahoo! JAPAN, and AI-driven search. To talk through your Japan entry, get in touch.

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