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A vertical AI startup is extremely vulnerable if its core offering can be easily replicated by the foundational model it's built upon. True defensibility comes from integrating unique, proprietary data sources or solving non-obvious workflow problems that the base model cannot simply be prompted to do.

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Startups can compete with large AI labs by capturing unique user interaction data from specialized workflows. This proprietary "user signal" enables post-training of models for specific tasks, creating a defensible advantage that labs, lacking that specific context, cannot easily replicate.

Startups that merely provide a user-friendly interface around foundational LLMs are losing their defensibility. The underlying models are now powerful enough that non-technical experts can replicate these workflows directly, rendering the wrapper obsolete.

The founder predicts that hyper-specific vertical AI solutions are too easy to replicate. While they may find initial traction, they lack a durable moat. The stronger, long-term business is building horizontal tools that empower users to solve their own complex problems.

AI companies built to fill feature gaps on top of foundation models are at high risk. As core models rapidly improve, they often absorb these adjacent features, disintermediating the "wrapper" companies. Their early-adopter customers are also the quickest to switch to better tools.

While foundational AI models threaten broad applications like writing aids, startups can thrive by focusing on vertical-specific needs. Building for niche workflows, compliance, and deep integrations creates a moat that large, generalist AI companies are unlikely to cross.

The pace of AI development means a startup's competitive advantage can be erased overnight by the next model release from a major lab like Google or Anthropic. Dr. el Kaliouby stresses that true defensibility now requires more than just a proprietary algorithm; it demands unique data, distribution, or IP that cannot be easily replicated.

Counter to fears that foundation models will obsolete all apps, AI startups can build defensible businesses by embedding AI into unique workflows, owning the customer relationship, and creating network effects. This mirrors how top App Store apps succeeded despite Apple's platform dominance.

While the "bitter lesson" suggests powerful general models will dominate, vertical AI solutions can thrive by deeply integrating with a company's specific data, workflows, and project context. The model can't know this proprietary information; value is created by the application that bridges this gap.

In the AI era, defensibility comes from building a complex system of record, not just a thin wrapper on an LLM. Companies with a 'thick application layer' that offers standalone value are unattractive for model providers to replicate, whereas thin wrappers risk being absorbed by the platform they are built on.

An AI app that is merely a wrapper around a foundation model is at high risk of being absorbed by the model provider. True defensibility comes from integrating AI with proprietary data and workflows to become an indispensable enterprise system of record, like an HR or CRM system.