We scan new podcasts and send you the top 5 insights daily.
As AI makes software and open markets hyper-efficient, it collapses margins. The only sustainable businesses will be those built on 'dark pools'—proprietary assets like exclusive deal flow, unique relationships, or private data that cannot be easily replicated or arbitraged by algorithms. Open access leads to zero value.
A key competitive advantage for AI companies lies in capturing proprietary outcomes data by owning a customer's end-to-end workflow. This data, such as which legal cases are won or lost, is not publicly available. It creates a powerful feedback loop where the AI gets smarter at predicting valuable outcomes, a moat that general models cannot replicate.
As AI and better tools commoditize software creation, traditional technology moats are shrinking. The new defensible advantages are forms of liquidity: aggregated data, marketplace activity, or social interactions. These network effects are harder for competitors to replicate than code or features.
Since LLMs are commodities, sustainable competitive advantage in AI comes from leveraging proprietary data and unique business processes that competitors cannot replicate. Companies must focus on building AI that understands their specific "secret sauce."
The term "unsloppable" describes companies whose competitive advantage isn't their codebase, which AI can replicate. Instead, their strength comes from durable moats like hardware, strong network effects (Uber), exclusive IP (Disney), or physical infrastructure, which are difficult for AI-powered startups to clone.
If AI makes intelligence cheap and universally available, its economic value may collapse. This theory suggests that selling raw AI models could become a low-margin, utility-like business. Profitability will depend on building moats through specialized applications or regulatory capture, not on selling base intelligence.
Unlike cable or power companies that benefit from regional monopolies, AI intelligence is a globally competitive, frictionless market. This dynamic is 'so much worse' for business because it allows for perfect arbitrage, driving the price of intelligence toward zero and making it incredibly difficult to build a sustainable, high-margin business on the infrastructure layer.
AI accelerates capitalism's natural tendency to compress margins to zero. By automating tasks and replicating solutions cheaply, AI makes it difficult to sustain profits, benefiting only those who own scarce, non-digitizable assets like data, trust, or real estate.
As AI commoditizes software creation, the primary source of sustainable value shifts from the software itself to the unique, high-quality data that AI agents use for decision-making. Businesses must re-center their strategy around data as the core asset.
As algorithms become more widespread, the key differentiator for leading AI labs is their exclusive access to vast, private data sets. XAI has Twitter, Google has YouTube, and OpenAI has user conversations, creating unique training advantages that are nearly impossible for others to replicate.
In a world where AI makes software cheap or free, the primary value shifts to specialized human expertise. Companies can monetize by using their software as a low-cost distribution channel to sell high-margin, high-ticket services that customers cannot easily replicate, like specialized security analysis.