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In an agentic world, the core AI model becomes a commodity. The defensible product is the curated experience layer built on top of it—the guardrails, instructions, and personality that define the user interaction and differentiate the offering.
As AI makes it easy to generate 'good enough' software, a functional product is no longer a moat. The new advantage is creating an experience so delightful that users prefer it over a custom-built alternative. This makes design the primary driver of value, setting premium software apart from the infinitely generated.
As AI "super agents" become functionally similar, the deciding factor for user adoption will be marketing and branding. OpenClaw's success, driven by its quirky personality and community focus, shows that brand differentiation is critical in a technologically convergent market where functionality is table stakes.
The next billion AI agent users will not interact via developer-centric interfaces like Telegram. The winning platforms will be opinionated, provide guardrails, and hide technical complexities like tool calls, offering a user experience closer to a polished SaaS product.
Companies must now design their products, from documentation to onboarding, for a new primary user: the AI agent. This "Agent Experience" (AX) is critical because agents are how a new, massive user base will interact with and build upon platforms, making it a product's North Star.
For tools designed for AI interaction, the ease with which an agent can use the product (AX) is as critical as the user experience (UX) for humans. This can be improved by directly asking the agent for feedback on how to make the product more ergonomic for it.
Former OpenAI VP Peter Deng argues that as AI models become commoditized, differentiation will shift to product taste and intuitive workflows. He contends that success will hinge on a deep understanding of consumer desires, making the model itself less important than the user experience it enables.
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.
Top-tier language models are becoming commoditized in their excellence. The real differentiator in agent performance is now the 'harness'—the specific context, tools, and skills you provide. A minimalist, well-crafted harness on a good model will outperform a bloated setup on a great one.
The future interface for SaaS products won't just be a UI for humans or a REST API for machines. It will be an 'agent harness'—a rich environment of context, documentation, and skills that enables a customer's AI agent to expertly operate the product and extract maximum value.
For personal AI agents like OpenClaw, the conversational interface—feeling like you're texting a person—accounts for the vast majority of user adoption and value. This emotional, personal connection is far more important than the agent's technical capabilities, like self-modification or its skills directory.