// people per project · agents on the tools
There’s no team page here because there’s no fixed team, and being honest about that is the point.
How the studio works
RandomSynergy is one operator plus a network, not a headcount. I own every decision end to end; two force-multipliers extend the reach: specialist collaborators engaged per project, and an agent layer running on the studio’s own tools. That’s the method (synergy between systems, people, and process) applied to how the studio itself runs. The receipt: 165+ repos on GitHub (RandomSynergy17).
Collaborators and partners
No fixed bench. Specialists come in project by project, matched to what a given build actually needs, then roll off when it ships. You never pay for headcount a project doesn’t use.
The network runs in both directions: I’m also the specialist other teams bring in, advising teams like Levels AV on AI integration and innovation, and running funding research and go-to-market for Abu Dhabi, UAE, and international programmes, serving Fortune 500 clients and small teams alike.
Names are shared when they’re relevant to your engagement, not paraded here.
The agent layer
The studio runs on its own tools, and agents work through them the same way I do:
- GBrain: self-hosted studio memory served over MCP. Agents query it before answering and write back after working, building 2,386 pages of decisions, infrastructure, and debugging history that survive the sessions that produced them.
- RNSNB: image generation as a hosted MCP server. Agents produce hero art and product shots through the same backend I use in the browser, every image at a permanent URL.
- Publish and deploy pipelines: this site’s copy is drafted in markdown, run through automated review passes, and published to WordPress over WP-CLI; theme code ships the same scripted way.
Agents do the repeatable, well-specified work; I own the judgment calls. That division of labor is why a one-operator studio ships at this pace.
The operator, the specialists, the agent layer: an engagement gets whichever mix the work needs. Tell me what you’re building.
