AI. AI. AI. Ai yai yai! Since last November, the chorus for artificial intelligence has grown louder and LOUDER. š£
And, Iām not sure if itās because technology companies understand what to build with it or if itās an attempt to weather the current economy. āHey, AI is trendy. Letās ride this wave. Sell it while itās hot.ā š
Yes, Iāve used ChatGPT. Iāve seen what Adobe Photoshop can do. Midjourney is cool. I even tried to get RoomGPT to help me redesign my house (spoiler: sorry, no). I see the potential there. And, yes, itās limitless.
But is it disruptive yet? š
Hereās my product marketing take:
When OpenAI launched ChatGPT, it became the fastest-growing app of all time. And a new bar was set for successful product launches everywhere. Eat your hearts out, PMMs! PLG for the win. š¤
A subtle change happened, too. AI transformed from an add-on feature into a product. And OpenAI became the leader of a new market category. In other words, AI used to be the seasoning you added to the entrĆ©e. Now, itās the main course. Or at least, an Ć la carte item. š
Yet companies are still treating it like a feature. Letās add generative AI to this. A sprinkle of LLM here. GPT it. And who can blame them? Itās too new. The cost to build your own AI innovation is astronomical. To remake a dish as āAI-firstā when you already have real breadwinnersā¦ well, thatās more reasonable but also tough. Especially now. š„
So, whatās changed? Everything and nothing. Product teams are reimagining. Product marketers are still adding the current flavor of āwith AIā to sentences.
Is this the beginning of a new Iron Age? No one knows. ĀÆ\_(ć)_/ĀÆ
The latest AI tools are novel. But, to me, they are more distracting than disruptive. At least for right now.