Proficiency with AI video generators is a strategic business advantage, not just a content skill. Like early mastery of YouTube or Instagram, it creates a defensible distribution channel by allowing individuals and startups to own audience attention, which is an unfair advantage in the market.

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A powerful workflow for AI content creation involves a three-tool stack. Use Perplexity as a research agent to understand your audience, feed its output into Claude to act as a content strategist and prompt writer, and then use Sora 2 to produce the final video.

Don't view generative AI video as just a way to make traditional films more efficiently. Ben Horowitz sees it as a fundamentally new creative medium, much like movies were to theater. It enables entirely new forms of storytelling by making visuals that once required massive budgets accessible to anyone.

Synthesia initially targeted Hollywood with AI dubbing—a "vitamin" for experts. They found a much larger, "house-on-fire" problem by building a platform for the billions of people who couldn't create video at all, democratizing the medium instead of just improving it for existing professionals.

Hera's target is not just existing After Effects users, but the larger market of people who need motion graphics but find professional tools too complex or expensive. By lowering the barrier to entry, AI tools create entirely new markets of creators, much like Airbnb did for home rentals.

The expansion of Gen AI-powered effects on YouTube Shorts allows any brand to create custom visual effects. A small company can design a popular, non-branded effect that goes viral, associating their niche with a widespread trend and gaining massive organic exposure.

While today's focus is on text-based LLMs, the true, defensible AI battleground will be in complex modalities like video. Generating video requires multiple interacting models and unique architectures, creating far greater potential for differentiation and a wider competitive moat than text-based interfaces, which will become commoditized.

As AI and no-code tools make software easier to build, technological advantage is no longer a defensible moat. The most successful companies now win through unique distribution advantages, such as founder-led content or deep community building. Go-to-market strategy has surpassed product as the key differentiator.

While large enterprises remain cautious about ceding creative control to AI, small and mid-sized businesses see a breakthrough. AI overcomes the economic barriers to content production, enabling them to execute personalization and campaigns at a scale that was previously out of reach.

AI makes the technical 'doing' of business, like coding, accessible to everyone. The durable competitive edge is no longer the ability to build a product, but the ability to reach and acquire customers. Audience and distribution channels are the new defensible assets.

By natively embedding a full suite of AI tools for video generation, editing, and ideation, TikTok is evolving beyond a content distribution platform. It is becoming a self-contained creation engine, reducing creator reliance on third-party apps and positioning itself to challenge YouTube's dominance.