Contrary to early narratives, a proprietary dataset is not the primary moat for AI applications. True, lasting defensibility is built by deeply integrating into an industry's ecosystem—connecting different stakeholders, leveraging strategic partnerships, and using funding velocity to build the broadest product suite.
In the fast-evolving AI space, traditional moats are less relevant. The new defensibility comes from momentum—a combination of rapid product shipment velocity and effective distribution. Teams that can build and distribute faster than competitors will win, as the underlying technology layer is constantly shifting.
Google's competitive advantage in AI is its vertical integration. By controlling the entire stack from custom TPUs and foundational models (Gemini) to IDEs (AI Studio) and user applications (Workspace), it creates a deeply integrated, cost-effective, and convenient ecosystem that is difficult to replicate.
AI capabilities offer strong differentiation against human alternatives. However, this is not a sustainable moat against competitors who can use the same AI models. Lasting defensibility still comes from traditional moats like workflow integration and network effects.
The long-held belief that a complex codebase provides a durable competitive advantage is becoming obsolete due to AI. As software becomes easier to replicate, defensibility shifts away from the technology itself and back toward classic business moats like network effects, brand reputation, and deep industry integration.
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.
ElevenLabs' CEO sees their cutting-edge research as a temporary advantage—a 6-12 month head start. The real, long-term defensibility comes from using that time to build a superior product layer and a robust ecosystem of integrations, workflows, and brand. This strategy accepts model commoditization and focuses on building durable value on top of the technology.
Creating a basic AI coding tool is easy. The defensible moat comes from building a vertically integrated platform with its own backend infrastructure like databases, user management, and integrations. This is extremely difficult for competitors to replicate, especially if they rely on third-party services like Superbase.
As AI commoditizes technology, traditional moats are eroding. The only sustainable advantage is "relationship capital"—being defined by *who* you serve, not *what* you do. This is built through depth (feeling seen), density (community belonging), and durability (permission to offer more products).
While OpenAI leads in AI buzz, Google's true advantage is its established ecosystem of Chrome, Search, Android, and Cloud. Newcomers like OpenAI aspire to build this integrated powerhouse, but Google already is one, making its business far more resilient even if its own AI stumbles.