Law firms perceive AI as an existential threat. PointOne successfully entered the market by positioning their tool as a non-threatening entry point into AI. It helps lawyers adapt using their existing billable model, rather than trying to disrupt it, making it a safe first step.
Industries with historically low software adoption (like trial law or dentistry) are now viable markets. Instead of selling a tool, AI startups are selling an outcome—the automation of a specific labor role. This shifts the value proposition from a software expense to a direct labor cost replacement.
When selling innovative tech to risk-averse enterprises, don't build for their needs today; build for the future they will be forced into by competitive pressure. The strategy is to anticipate the industry's direction and have the solution ready when they finally realize they are being left behind.
Founders often mistakenly market "AI" as the core offering. Customers don't buy AI; they buy solutions to their long-standing problems (e.g., more leads, better service). Frame your product around the problem it solves, using AI as the powerful new tool in your solution space that makes it possible.
Customers are hesitant to trust a black-box AI with critical operations. The winning business model is to sell a complete outcome or service, using AI internally for a massive efficiency advantage while keeping humans in the loop for quality and trust.
Economist Bernd Hobart argues that large enterprises are too risk-averse for early AI adoption. The winning go-to-market strategy, similar to Stripe's, is for AI-native companies to sell to smaller, agile customers first. They can then grow with these customers, mature their product, and eventually sell the proven solution back to the legacy giants.
During YC, Paul Graham advised PointOne that the biggest opportunity wasn't selling tools to law firms, but becoming an "AI law firm." He hypothesized that AI's efficiency would create a winner-take-all market, consolidating the entire legal industry into a single entity.
To penetrate tech-resistant markets like personal injury law, the winning model is not selling AI software but offering an AI-powered service. Finch acts as an outsourced, AI-augmented paralegal team, an easier value proposition for firms to adopt than training existing staff on new, complex tools.
While many legal AI tools use the same foundational models, they differentiate by offering features crucial for law firms: strict permissions, compliance controls, and integrations with proprietary legal databases like Westlaw. This 'packaging' of trust is the real product, for which discerning law firms willingly pay a premium.
Instead of pursuing complex, open-ended consulting projects, partners can scale more effectively by creating productized, "turnkey AI" offerings for specific business units like legal or marketing. This approach lowers the adoption barrier for customers by delivering predictable results for a defined use case, making it easier to sell into departments or smaller businesses.
To sell into a cynical market where previous solutions failed (a "Third Journey"), you can't just be a "next-gen" tool. You must re-educate buyers with precise messaging and a new category name, then instantly prove you're different by delivering undeniable value with minimal effort.