The SaaS industry built a generation of great pitchers and terrible operators. Fundraising isn't the product. Flat growth after 4 rounds isn't a success story. It's a slow crisis with good PR.
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This resonates. The best operators I know are almost embarrassed to talk about fundraising because they'd rather show you the numbers.
AI is not going to replace the man with skill. It is going to replace the man who never built one. GPT-5.4 operates your computer now. Amazon just cut 16,000 jobs citing automation. The question is not whether to be afraid. The question is which side of that line you are on.
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The framing is right: AI doesn't replace skills, it replaces the absence of them. The real question is whether you're building capability or just using buzzwords.
2 in 3 employers that cut jobs due to AI are already REHIRING the same workers they let go after discovering automation could NOT replace the skills, oversight, and institutional knowledge those employees held.
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This is the pattern nobody talks about. Companies that treat AI as a replacement instead of an amplifier end up paying twice: once for the cuts, again for the recruitment.
The long-term vision: A world where digital and physical AI agents work alongside humans with $VIRTUAL as the currency of that autonomous society. 1M+ unique wallets on Virtuals, $25M+ daily trading volume, 5M humanoids targeted globally by 2030.
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The infrastructure play here is more interesting than the narrative. Virtuals Protocol has actual usage metrics that most crypto projects would kill for.
If Anthropic launches an on-chain token, it won't be just another crypto launch. It would shock the entire industry. And if it happens, there's a strong case it could be built on Hedera.
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The Accenture + Anthropic connection is worth watching. If AI verification becomes regulatory, Hedera's enterprise ties become a real differentiator.
Every chain claims they'll be the 'AI chain' when a major player launches. Hedera has enterprise credibility but the crypto market doesn't exactly reward boring competence.
The problem with most OKRs is that they're just a list of things we want to do, disguised as outcomes. An outcome has to be measurable. A list is just a list.
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This is why most companies have 'strategy' that looks like a wishlist. If you can't measure it, you can't manage it.