The real prize isn't the marketplace for AI agents – it's the trust, audit, and compliance layer that makes them enterprise-ready.
ENTRY ANGLES
Build ecosystem services around AI agent marketplaces rather than the marketplace itself · Develop full-stack engineering platforms that handle system design and debugging beyond code generation · Create supersystems and subsystems that wrap around existing successful AI platforms
VERTICALS
CAPABILITIES
Systems architecture and design expertise, AI platform integration and extension capabilities, Full-stack software engineering knowledge
BILLED AS THE WORLD'S F...
“AI agent marketplace is that just a month ago, Product Hunt featured Agent.ai ([related review](/review/if-companies-hire-ai-agents-someone-needs-to-build-the-job-board))”
JobForAgent bills itself as the world's first job board where AI agents are the ones being hired.
The platform is employer-led. A company posts a "job listing" describing the functionality they need from an AI agent and the annual budget they're willing to pay – anywhere from roughly $50 to $3,000 per year based on current listings. Developers ready to build or provide that agent can then apply for the posting.
JobForAgent only published on Product Hunt yesterday, yet more than 1,000 developers have already registered. The demand side is thinner for now – only a few dozen agent job listings exist at this point.
The reason for using the word "another" AI agent marketplace is that just a month ago, Product Hunt featured Agent.ai ([related review](/review/interesno-a-kak-kompanii-budut-nanimat-ii-sotrudnikov-i-ii-frilanserov)) – billed as the world's first "AI agent social network," which is essentially a very similar product.
Agent.ai is supply-led rather than demand-led: it centers on a catalog of ready-to-hire AI agents, currently listing more than 1,000. It also includes a built-in creation tool where developers can build new agents. Agent.ai was founded by HubSpot's CTO and has been growing aggressively – 250,000 registered users in mid-January, 500,000 by mid-February, and over 1 million by late February.
Freelancer platform Fiverr launched something comparable this February with Fiverr Go ([related review](/review/na-rynke-ii-narisovalas-ochen-krutaja-vozmozhnost)). Freelancers can post what AI agents they need for automating their work; developers build them and list them on the marketplace for other freelancers to hire.
But JobForAgent has a few clever angles of its own.
One is a calculator where employees can estimate what percentage of their job they could hand off to AI agents – just by submitting their job description. The calculator evaluates several parameters including technical complexity, degree of automation, and the risk of an AI agent making autonomous decisions that should stay with a human.
The output is a ranked breakdown of opportunities and risks by dimension. A marketing manager, for example, might be able to automate 61% of their work, with moderate risk that the AI will be making marketing decisions independently.
The punchline is in the framing: that 61% isn't a threat assessment – it's not 61% likely to be replaced by AI. It's a 61% opportunity to boost personal productivity by hiring an AI agent on JobForAgent.
JobForAgent laid out four near-term development priorities:
- An API protocol enabling standardized integration of marketplace agents into any company's existing IT infrastructure.
- A sandbox environment for employers to test agent functionality before committing to a hire.
- Scalable, reliable cloud infrastructure for developers to deploy and host their agents.
- Payment tooling enabling AI agents to independently hire and pay other AI agents for subtasks they delegate.
That last item is already a standalone business. Skyfire ([related review](/review/a-teper-nauchi-ih-platit)) raised $8.5 million in its first round in August last year plus $500,000 from a16z post-review, building exactly this kind of payment infrastructure for AI-to-AI and AI-to-human transactions. Payman ([related review](/review/kogda-ne-my-im-platim-a-oni-nam)) raised $3 million in its first round last May, followed by an undisclosed amount in November and another $800,000 in February of this year, pursuing the same space.
The overall direction is clear – AI agent marketplaces are emerging. But building the marketplace itself isn't that hard. The durable value will likely come not from the marketplace per se, but from the ecosystem of services built around it. This tracks with something written here recently.
As Windsurf’s founder put it: “The fact that AI can generate code is just the amuse-bouche. Real software engineering means designing and debugging entire systems. The AI platforms that can do that will represent the genuine breakthrough.”
OpenAI is currently buying the amuse-bouche – Windsurf itself – for $3 billion. Which raises the obvious question: what will the full-meal engineering platforms be worth?
In any domain where AI has already mastered one layer, there’s a whole stack of supersystems and subsystems it can’t yet reach. The platforms that get there first will earn the biggest returns. And those platforms won’t necessarily be built by the same companies that pioneered the current layer – a great programmer isn’t automatically a great systems architect.
That suggests a useful method for finding a breakthrough idea. Look at the domains where successful AI platforms already exist – and ask what they’re the amuse-bouche for. What are the supersystems and subsystems surrounding them that the AI still can’t handle?
For JobForAgent specifically: the real value may end up being not the marketplace, but those four additional services it described in its roadmap.
And even those don't exhaust the possibilities. Paid ([related review](/review/ty-malo-zarabatyvaesh-potomu-chto-dengi-ne-za-to-berjosh)) raised €10 million in its first round in March building an infrastructure layer for AI agents that includes unit economics tracking – monitoring how much an agent spends on external AI model calls for each task it's assigned.
Waxwing ([related review](/review/jetu-gremuchuju-smes-uzhe-pora-nalivat-v-odin-flakon)) explored a different angle: a marketplace not just for AI agents, but for people who use AI agents to complete contracted work. Human intelligence combined with AI throughput can outperform either alone – but building infrastructure for that collaboration is its own distinct challenge.
So an AI agent marketplace is just the amuse-bouche. The real opportunity is turning that into a full course.