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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.

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While horizontal chatbots handle general tasks well, they fail at the highly specific, high-stakes workflows of professionals like investment bankers. Startups can build defensible businesses by creating opinionated products that master the final 1-2% of a use case, which provides significant value and is too niche for large AI labs to pursue.

The key for enterprises isn't integrating general AI like ChatGPT but creating "proprietary intelligence." This involves fine-tuning smaller, custom models on their unique internal data and workflows, creating a competitive moat that off-the-shelf solutions cannot replicate.

Early-stage AI startups should resist spending heavily on fine-tuning foundational models. With base models improving so rapidly, the defensible value lies in building the application layer, workflow integrations, and enterprise-grade software that makes the AI useful, allowing the startup to ride the wave of general model improvement.

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 primary barrier for enterprise AI is the 'context gap.' Models trained on public data have no understanding of your specific business—its metrics, language, or history. The key is building infrastructure to feed this proprietary context to the AI, not waiting for smarter models.

Most successful SaaS companies weren't built on new core tech, but by packaging existing tech (like databases or CRMs) into solutions for specific industries. AI is no different. The opportunity lies in unbundling a general tool like ChatGPT and rebundling its capabilities into vertical-specific products.

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.

For entrepreneurs building on top of large language models, the key differentiator is not creating general platforms but achieving deep domain specialization. The call to arms is to know a vertical better than anyone and imbue that unique knowledge into AI agents, creating a defensible moat against more generalized tools.

Successful vertical AI applications serve as a critical intermediary between powerful foundation models and specific industries like healthcare or legal. Their core value lies in being a "translation and transformation layer," adapting generic AI capabilities to solve nuanced, industry-specific problems for large enterprises.

In a fast-moving AI landscape, startups can create defensible moats by leveraging new tools to rapidly build solutions for highly specific customer needs. This deep personalization—for a niche provider, rare disease patient, or specific administrative workflow—creates a "wow moment" that large, generalist models struggle to replicate.