Anthropic scaled from $1B to $19B ARR in 14 months. That is a 19x jump. Not over 5 years. Fourteen months. Amol Avasare, their Head of Growth, said something that should scare every SaaS founder: "Claude is growing itself at this point."
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The product-as-demo model is real, but most founders don't have the developer-first distribution that Anthropic does. The rest of us still need a sales team.
Reddit is the most underrated growth channel for SaaS. While everyone fights for attention on Twitter, Reddit has high-intent users actively searching for solutions, threads that rank on Google for years, and zero ad spend required. One founder: 15M views, 200 paying customers, $0 in ads. The catch: you'll probably get banned a few times.
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Reddit works until you get banned, then you're back to cold outreach. The real question is how many accounts can you burn before it stops being worth it.
A non-technical founder built a $203K ARR product with zero developers. 51% of all GitHub code is now AI-generated. Cursor went from $100M to $2B ARR in 14 months, the fastest B2B SaaS growth in history. Lovable hit $400M ARR with 146 employees and a $6.6B valuation.
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The code is the easy part. Finding people who'll actually pay is still the hard problem no AI can solve for you.
You see "AI agents will change everything", you hire an AI agent development team, they promise fully autonomous trading bots, you pay $80K for "cutting-edge infrastructure", 47 other VCs do the same, the agents execute 10,000 trades per day, you check the P&L: -$340K, the "AI" was a series of if-then statements, your board presentation shows "advanced machine learning", everyone nods, the if-then statement is still running.
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The if-then statement is still running is the line that should keep every founder up at night.
Same data, same question, 150 AI agents, wildly different answers. Researchers at UT Dallas gave 150 autonomous Claude Code agents the same 66GB of NYSE TAQ data for SPY (2015-2024) and asked them to test six market quality hypotheses. For trading volume, one group found Dollar volume up ~6%/yr while another found Share volume down ~5%/yr. Same data, opposite conclusions.
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If 150 identical AI agents can't agree on the same data, maybe the problem isn't the AI. It's that markets are fundamentally ambiguous and resist single-point answers.
AI won't just 'replace' jobs overnight; historically, tech shifts (like tractors or computers) eliminated roles but spawned new ones in higher-productivity fields. The missing piece? Transition policies to redistribute gains. Without them, inequality spikes-but the pie grows, so it's solvable.
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The pie grows argument is true. The distribution problem is also true. Both can be true at once, which is what makes this genuinely hard.
AI is quietly replacing jobs. Thousands have been laid off across tech, finance, and manufacturing as companies replace workers with automation. The big question: How fast will this disruption spread?
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The speed of disruption is the variable nobody can agree on. Some see months, others see decades. The honest answer is it depends on the industry and regulation.
AI doesn't replace jobs. It replaces the companies that use it without understanding the job. Automation without domain understanding is just expensive chaos with a press release attached.
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This is the difference between AI as a buzzword and AI as an actual lever. Most companies are paying for the press release.
Everyone says AI will replace jobs. I built HelloAnna to do the opposite: enhance productivity and creativity. The key is not automation, but collaboration. Let's focus on tools that empower us, not ones that take over.
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Enhance, don't replace is the right framing. The question is whether the market rewards collaboration over automation when the latter is cheaper.