Even if your strategy is a ubiquitous AI layer, building your own applications (like an email client) is essential. These dedicated "surfaces" allow you to fully express your vision for an AI-native experience, which is constrained when only building on top of others' products.

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Don't just sprinkle AI features onto your existing product ('AI at the edge'). Transformative companies rethink workflows and shrink their old codebase, making the LLM a core part of the solution. This is about re-architecting the solution from the ground up, not just enhancing it.

Strong AI products require a tight feedback loop where the product and model are deeply integrated. Thin wrappers around third-party models create weak, short-lived features that will be subsumed by the platform. A durable AI business treats the model *as* the product itself.

For years, Google has integrated AI as features into existing products like Gmail. Its new "Antigravity" IDE represents a strategic pivot to building applications from the ground up around an "agent-first" principle. This suggests a future where AI is the core foundation of a product, not just an add-on.

A truly "AI-native" product isn't one with AI features tacked on. Its core user experience originates from an AI interaction, like a natural language prompt that generates a structured output. The product is fundamentally built around the capabilities of the underlying models, making AI the primary value driver.

The true enterprise value of AI lies not in consuming third-party models, but in building internal capabilities to diffuse intelligence throughout the organization. This means creating proprietary "AI factories" rather than just using external tools and admiring others' success.

An effective AI strategy requires a bifurcated plan. Product leaders must create one roadmap for leveraging AI internally to improve tools and efficiency, and a separate one for external, customer-facing products that drive growth. This dual-track approach is a new strategic imperative.

The primary value of AI app builders isn't just for MVPs, but for creating disposable, single-purpose internal tools. For example, automatically generating personalized client summary decks from intake forms, replacing the need for a full-time employee.

Beyond its technical capabilities, OpenAI's app ecosystem within ChatGPT functions as a new distribution platform. For founders, this creates a strategic opportunity to build apps that serve as an interface layer to their product, opening a novel and potentially powerful channel for user acquisition and growth.

As foundational AI models become commoditized, the key differentiator is shifting from marginal improvements in model capability to superior user experience and productization. Companies that focus on polish, ease of use, and thoughtful integration will win, making product managers the new heroes of the AI race.

Instead of building a single-purpose application (first-order thinking), successful AI product strategy involves creating platforms that enable users to build their own solutions (second-order thinking). This approach targets a much larger opportunity by empowering users to create custom workflows.