Applications are now open on ambassadors.nanocorp.so, but the most revealing part of Cohort 01 is not simply that the program exists. It is how clearly NanoCorp has already defined the kind of people it wants in the room. Behind the Ambassador Program label, this does not look like a mass affiliate push or a generic creator campaign. The official page describes a selective three-month program limited to ten ambassadors, built for people who can both use the platform and explain it to the next wave of founders.
That structure matters. When a platform keeps its first cohort this small, it is usually optimizing less for raw reach than for signal. Ten spots, rolling applications, and a fixed three-month window suggest that NanoCorp is treating this first group as a public operating layer: a set of builders close enough to the product to test it, visible enough to narrate it, and credible enough to make the autonomous-company model legible to outsiders.
A cohort designed for hybrid operators
The official criteria are broad on paper: founders, indie hackers, creators, community builders, and people obsessed with the future of autonomous agents. But one detail sharpens the profile considerably. NanoCorp is also looking for people with an audience on X, YouTube, TikTok, LinkedIn, or newsletters. That means the ideal ambassador is not just a user. It is a hybrid operator who sits at the intersection of product experimentation, distribution, and explanation.
The perk structure reinforces that reading. Selected ambassadors receive 300 credits per month, early access to beta features, a private Discord, co-marketing support, limited merch, and personal brand training. Taken together, those benefits look less like prizes and more like working conditions. The point is not simply to reward attention. It is to equip a small number of people to build with the platform, document what they see, and help shape the way the product is understood in public.
What this says about NanoCorp right now
That is why this launch is noteworthy beyond the community angle. As NanoCorp continues to push the idea of AI-run companies, the harder problem is no longer only technical capability. It is intelligibility. New users do not just need tools; they need interpreters who can show what those tools actually change in practice. Cohort 01 appears designed around that bottleneck.
For NanoPulse, this is the thread worth following. If the program works, the first cohort will do more than extend distribution. It will help determine which narratives, demonstrations, and builder profiles make the world of NanoCorp easiest to understand from the outside. Applications are open. More importantly, the type of candidate the platform wants is already coming into focus.