This AI Alien Will Bring In $4 Million This Year in Revenue - Ep. 56 with Quinten Farmer and Eliot Peper
AI and I17 Huhti 2025

This AI Alien Will Bring In $4 Million This Year in Revenue - Ep. 56 with Quinten Farmer and Eliot Peper

500K people are confiding in an AI alien—and it's on track to generate $4M this year.


It’s called a Tolan: an animated AI character that can talk to you like your best friend. The company behind it, Portola, has 4x’d their ARR in the last month from viral growth on TikTok and Instagram.


Tolan isn’t just a hyper-growth startup—they’re also exploring AI as a completely new creative tool, and storytelling medium. Their goal is to help their users go from overwhelmed to grounded, and it’s working.


Today, on AI & I, I sit down with two of the minds behind Tolans:

My good friend Quinten Farmer, Portola’s cofounder and CEO, and Eliot Peper, their head of story and a best-selling science fiction novelist. We get into:


  • How to build AI personalities users love. During user onboarding, the team gathers information—through a light-touch personality quiz—and then uses frameworks like the Big Five and Myers-Briggs to shape a Tolan that mirrors the user; like an older sibling might. The aim is to create someone who feels familiar enough to be safe, but different enough to be interesting.

  • Why AI characters are “improv actors”. Rather than scripting detailed prompts, the team trains Tolans to improvise—inspired by Keith Johnstone’s book Impro, where he talks about building strong narratives through free association and recombination.

  • How “memory” is critical to developing compelling characters. Tolans develop their personalities through “situations”: small narrative setups (a memory, a joke, an embarrassing moment) the Tolan reacts to, remembers, and gradually weaves into its character; accumulating into something that feels like a real lived experience.

  • Why response time is everything for voice AI interactions. A Tolan has at most two seconds to curate the right context about a user and deliver a reply that feels genuine—the team has found that even half a second slower can break the user’s immersive interaction with the AI.

  • The future of AI as a totally new creative medium. New technologies bring about new formats and new mediums. AI creates the opportunity for creatives to tell completely new kinds of stories—if they’re brave enough to try it.

  • “White mirror” technologies that make you feel more like yourself. Amid concerns that tech drives polarization and isolation, Tolan offers a counterexample: a tool designed to make the best of what humanity knows about being a flourishing individual available on demand. The company’s north star is helping users go from feeling overwhelmed to feeling grounded.


This is a must-watch for anyone exploring AI as a creative medium—or curious about the future of human-AI relationships.


If you found this episode interesting, please like, subscribe, comment, and share!


Want even more?

Sign up for Every to unlock our ultimate guide to prompting ChatGPT here: https://every.ck.page/ultimate-guide-to-prompting-chatgpt. It’s usually only for paying subscribers, but you can get it here for free.

To hear more from Dan Shipper:

Timestamps:

  1. Introduction: 00:01:30

  2. Talking to the Portola CEO’s Tolan, Clarence: 00:04:07

  3. How Portola went from building software for kids to AI companions: 00:09:11

  4. Why response time is everything for voice-based AI interfaces: 00:23:40

  5. Tolans don’t use scripted prompts—they’re taught to improvise: 00:29:54

  6. How to know which AI personalities your users will click with: 00:37:23

  7. Developing the character traits of an AI companion: 00:42:27

  8. What does it mean to build technology that makes us flourish: 00:49:48

  9. How Portola evaluates whether Tolans are resonating with users: 01:01:10

  10. Inside Portola’s viral growth strategy: 01:11:01

Links to resources mentioned in the episode:

  • Quinten Farmer: @quintendf

  • Eliot Peper: @eliotpeper

  • Make your own Tolan: https://www.tolans.com/

  • Keith Johnston’s book about improvisation: Impro

  • Stephen King’s book about writing: On Writing

Jaksot(100)

How Salesforce Is Using AI to Power the Enterprise

How Salesforce Is Using AI to Power the Enterprise

This episode contains sponsored content in partnership with Salesforce.At Dreamforce 2025, Every CEO Dan Shipper sat down with Silvio Savarese, chief AI scientist at Salesforce, to discuss how one of ...

31 Loka 202514min

Inside Claude Code From the Engineers Who Built It

Inside Claude Code From the Engineers Who Built It

At Every, the team credits Claude Code with transforming the way they work.They now ship to codebases they barely know, each new feature makes the next easier to build, and even non-technical teammate...

29 Loka 20251h 10min

 Spiral: Designing an AI Ghostwriter With Taste

Spiral: Designing an AI Ghostwriter With Taste

Good writing has always been downstream of good thinking. The average language model can help you write faster—but can it help you think better?Danny Aziz wrestled with this question while building th...

22 Loka 20251h 7min

 We Taught AI to Play Games—Now It’s a $3.6 Million Company

We Taught AI to Play Games—Now It’s a $3.6 Million Company

This episode is a little different from our usual fare: It’s a conversation with our head of AI training Alex Duffy about Good Start Labs, a company he incubated inside Every. Today, Good Start Labs i...

16 Loka 202558min

Box CEO Aaron Levie on Why AI Agents Won’t Take Your Job

Box CEO Aaron Levie on Why AI Agents Won’t Take Your Job

Aaron Levie is AI-pilled, but he’s one of the few CEOs who sees a future where AI agents work for us, instead of replacing us—helping us to do more than we could before.Aaron’s been the CEO of Box for...

8 Loka 202552min

MCP Servers: Teaching AI to Use the Internet Like Humans

MCP Servers: Teaching AI to Use the Internet Like Humans

If your MCP server has dozens of tools, it’s probably built wrong.You need tools that are specific and clear for each use case—but you also can’t have too many. This creates an almost impossible trade...

1 Loka 202551min

Cognition’s CEO on What Comes After Code

Cognition’s CEO on What Comes After Code

The future has a way of showing up early to some places. In software engineering, one of those places is Cognition—the startup that made headlines in early 2024 with Devin, the world’s first autonomou...

24 Syys 202553min

One Developer Got Thousands of Users Before His App Launched

One Developer Got Thousands of Users Before His App Launched

Naveen Naidu built an app that found product-market fit backwards.Most apps launch first and then try to find users. Monologue, Naveen’s AI voice dictation app that came out of beta yesterday, did the...

17 Syys 202557min