Despite the hype, AI's impact on daily life remains minimal because most consumer apps haven't changed. The true societal shift will occur when new, AI-native applications are built from the ground up, much like the iPhone enabled a new class of apps, rather than just bolting AI features onto old frameworks.
Don't view AI as just a feature set. Instead, treat "intelligence" as a fundamental new building block for software, on par with established primitives like databases or APIs. When conceptualizing any new product, assume this intelligence layer is a non-negotiable part of the technology stack to solve user problems effectively.
Many teams wrongly focus on the latest models and frameworks. True improvement comes from classic product development: talking to users, preparing better data, optimizing workflows, and writing better prompts.
Today's dominant AI tools like ChatGPT are perceived as productivity aids, akin to "homework helpers." The next multi-billion dollar opportunity is in creating the go-to AI for fun, creativity, and entertainment—the app people use when they're not working. This untapped market focuses on user expression and play.
Overly structured, workflow-based systems that work with today's models will become bottlenecks tomorrow. Engineers must be prepared to shed abstractions and rebuild simpler, more general systems to capture the gains from exponentially improving models.
Don't just sprinkle AI features onto your existing product ('AI at the edge'). Transformative companies rethink workflows and shrink their old codebase, making the LLM a core part of the solution. This is about re-architecting the solution from the ground up, not just enhancing it.
The most effective application of AI isn't a visible chatbot feature. It's an invisible layer that intelligently removes friction from existing user workflows. Instead of creating new work for users (like prompt engineering), AI should simplify experiences, like automatically surfacing a 'pay bill' link without the user ever consciously 'using AI.'
To get mainstream users to adopt AI, you can't ask them to learn a new workflow. The key is to integrate AI capabilities directly into the tools and processes they already use. AI should augment their current job, not feel like a separate, new task they have to perform.
For the first time, a disruptive technology's most advanced capabilities are available to the public from day one via consumer apps. An individual with a smartphone has access to the same state-of-the-art AI as a top VC or Fortune 500 CEO, making it the most democratic technology in history.
Most current AI tools are skeuomorphic—they just perform old tasks more efficiently. The real transformation will come from "AI-native" applications that create entirely new business models, just as Uber was an "iPhone-native" concept unimaginable before its time. The biggest winners will use AI to become the industry, not just sell to it.
Instead of building a single-purpose application (first-order thinking), successful AI product strategy involves creating platforms that enable users to build their own solutions (second-order thinking). This approach targets a much larger opportunity by empowering users to create custom workflows.