The AI Gold Rush and Its Perils
For the past few years, a vibrant ecosystem of startups has blossomed around OpenAI’s technology. These companies operated on a simple, brilliant premise: take the raw, powerful intelligence of models like GPT-4, available through an API (Application Programming Interface), and wrap it in a user-friendly package for a specific need. Think of it like a chef using a high-end oven. OpenAI built the oven; startups created unique recipes. This led to a Cambrian explosion of new tools. There were apps to chat with your PDFs, services that could summarize thousand-page documents, and clever agents designed to automate complex digital tasks. Venture capitalists poured billions into this new gold rush, betting that these specialized 'wrappers' could build
durable businesses. The relationship seemed symbiotic: OpenAI got distribution and a living laboratory for its tech, while startups got a shortcut to building seemingly magical products.
When the Platform Becomes Your Competitor
This dynamic has a name in the tech world: 'Sherlocking.' It’s a term born from Apple’s long history of incorporating features from popular third-party apps directly into its own operating system, often rendering the original app obsolete. If you built a popular flashlight app, you were thrilled—until Apple put a flashlight button in the iPhone’s Control Center. OpenAI’s recent developer conferences have felt like a mass Sherlocking event for the AI world. With the release of updates like GPT-4 Turbo, the company didn’t just make its model smarter; it absorbed the functionalities of entire categories of startups. It dramatically increased the amount of text the model can process in one go, undercutting startups focused on long-document analysis. It integrated vision capabilities, threatening tools built for image interpretation. Most devastatingly, it launched 'GPTs' and the 'Assistant API,' allowing any user to easily create the very kind of custom chatbots that hundreds of startups had painstakingly built and monetized.
An Extinction-Level Event for Wrappers
The impact was immediate and brutal. Why would a customer pay a monthly subscription for a service that summarizes PDFs when they can now upload a document directly to ChatGPT for a similar, if not better, result? Startups that had raised millions to be the 'ChatGPT for X' suddenly found themselves competing with ChatGPT itself, which was now cheaper, more powerful, and directly integrated with the features they had considered their core value proposition. The issue isn't one of malice, but of gravity. For a platform company like OpenAI, incorporating popular use cases is a natural evolutionary step. Its goal is to make its core product as useful as possible for the largest number of people. For the startups in its path, however, this natural step feels like an earthquake. Their defensible 'moat' was revealed to be a puddle, and the ground they built on shifted beneath their feet.
The Choice: Pivot or Perish
This doesn't mean the end for every company building on OpenAI. But it does force a painful and urgent strategic reckoning. The era of the 'thin wrapper'—a simple user interface over an OpenAI API call—is likely over. To survive, startups are being forced to pivot and find a more durable competitive advantage. This could mean several things. Some are focusing on deep, vertical-specific workflows that a generalist tool like ChatGPT can't easily replicate. Think AI for highly regulated industries like law or medicine, where proprietary data and domain-specific knowledge are key. Others are focusing on a unique user experience or building a strong community that exists independently of the underlying tech. The new rule is that if your entire business can be replicated by a new feature announcement from OpenAI, you don’t have a business; you have a feature.











