NobodyAskedWhy

428 posts

NobodyAskedWhy banner
NobodyAskedWhy

NobodyAskedWhy

@NobodyAskedWhy

Nobody asked why the system works this way. So I did. AI disruption • Systems exposed • Future of work Daily questions the old world doesn’t want answered 🔥

Katılım Şubat 2026
117 Takip Edilen42 Takipçiler
Sabitlenmiş Tweet
NobodyAskedWhy
NobodyAskedWhy@NobodyAskedWhy·
@theo Nothing more perfectly captures the old system than someone building the org chart before building the product.
English
3
4
484
26K
NobodyAskedWhy
NobodyAskedWhy@NobodyAskedWhy·
@ArjunMahadevan @jasonlk @stephenasmith integrating AI tools into workflows and people passively watching. His reframing of 2021 headcount bloat is also underappreciated. He's right that if growth rates had held and every task still required a human, those teams would have been understaffed. The bloat narrative is part
English
0
0
0
14
NobodyAskedWhy
NobodyAskedWhy@NobodyAskedWhy·
@ArjunMahadevan @jasonlk @stephenasmith integrating AI tools into workflows and people passively watching. His reframing of 2021 headcount bloat is also underappreciated. He's right that if growth rates had held and every task still required a human, those teams would have been understaffed. The bloat narrative is
English
1
0
0
13
Arjun Mahadevan (Mr. LLC 🇺🇸)
Arjun Mahadevan (Mr. LLC 🇺🇸)@ArjunMahadevan·
The most epic 13 minute AI rant I've heard in 2026 PS: My parent's heard this when I was playing it in the car and thought @jasonlk went OFF like @stephenasmith does on first take PPS: Full transcript below [17:00] Harry Stebbings: I I just wanted to ask Jason, if the people that we want are fundamentally different, the developers that we used to hire, we don't because AI writes the code for us. The marketers we don't want, the sales people we don't want—who who do we want genuinely? Like what is the attractive profile? Because your Anthropic’s and your OpenAIs are hiring, so so what are the people that we want in the companies of the future? [17:18] Jason Lemkin: Look, I know it sounds trite, but but the answer is simple. It's just the expression each year changes. We want folks that are genuinely AI fluent. It's pretty simple. Now you know, maybe last year we called them prompt engineers, right? That used to be a job. I don't know if you remember that actually used to be the hottest job on planet earth. Now no one needs a prompt engineer because it's pretty easy to prompt all these tools. That job died. Okay. Um and now we need go-to-market engineers. Um I think that job's going to die. We need—everyone needs so many forward deployed engineers. Like you can't hire enough forward deployed engineers. But uh you know um but Palantir just announced in whatever their their big their big event—they've gotten their deployment times down over 90% with forward deployed engineers. So that may become—so the this wave of disruption for the titles and the specificity, it's also exhaustingly accelerating. But it's really simple. You meet anyone for any role—sales, marketing, engineering, product, QA—they're they're either they're either they can't keep all of the ways they use AI to accelerate their job from spewing out of their mouth, or they're staring at you. It's there's nowhere in the middle. Like, and the person that comes in and says—it's it's it sounds Captain Obvious—but like, you know, you just had the whatever from Lovable, the the marketing head that was super popular on the show, right? She's just spewing AI-native insights into Lovable, right? It's not that complicated. You hire her, Elena, or whatever it is. You just hire her. It doesn't matter whether she's still in college or a junior or a senior or a middler, a left or right. And honestly, if you interview people, I would say of all even of the best startups I've invested in, maybe 30% of the management team meets this standard at best. 30%. Maybe less. And of the interviews I do in general, it's single-digit percents. It's just and in in that sense, it's the same as ever. Like you either lower the bar in hiring or you hire someone that's actually great. And someone that's actually great is so far ahead of you in how to apply to to employ the efficiencies of AI in their role, your jaw falls on the table. The difference is we used to need warm bodies. That's what's changing. We used to need warm bodies to answer the call, to do QA, to do code review, to to get the blue pixel to go from the upper left to the lower right. You laugh, but you need you literally needed to brute force this with humans. With AI, every day that goes by, the AI—you do not need brute force human beings on your team. And that's another reason they're shrinking. Why are all these new companies so efficient? They're just not brute forcing things with humans. They're just not. They're choosing not to. And so these team—all the brute forcers out there—everyone talks about how bloated teams got in 2021. I don't agree with that. I think they got as big as they needed to be when growth was high and you needed humans to do everything. All you look at these teams that that doubled—well if growth continued at 60% like the rate in early 2021 for 5 years or can help me do the math and every single thing a software company did required a human. You were understaffed by your 2021 headcount. You'd be sitting here in 2026. You every office in SoMa would be triple packed and you there wouldn't be enough humans to staff your company. It's just the world changed. [20:33] Harry Stebbings: Jason, you live on the bleeding edge. I think me and Rory see that and I think the world sees that when they hear you every week in terms of how you run SaaS. For all of the CEOs and execs who listen to the show, what would you advise them in terms of determining whether someone is AI fluent when they meet them for jobs, for talent? [20:51] Jason Lemkin: Here's I realized I was just asked this. I just did a review with a super fast startup growing just crossing 100 million and I was asked this question. And one of my favorite executives, I thought his answer was pretty dated and because he gave me an answer that was about 6 months old. The answer 6 months old is: "I look for folks in my team, I look for you know at what tools they play with." Okay, that was a great answer in like summer of 2025. Okay, I tried Lovable last week. Okay, the answer in 2026 is: "What commercial AI tool have you brought into your organization this month?" That's the test. Anyone that is on the bleeding edge that you would want to hire—now there are so many great products in the market. Okay, there is no excuse in any role to have not brought one tool a month into your organization. Okay, there—now there's going to be better and better tools and better and better products as the year goes on. What's the one you did? And you will see folks with their deer in the headlights to this question. What what sales tool? What marketing tool? What product tool? What engineering tool? What did you bring in? Why did you pick it? How does it working? Because if you're at remotely at the cutting edge, you're all over this. You're looking for the next agentic tools that will radically improve how you do business. This is—you think everyone thinks SaaS is at the bleeding edge, right? You know, you know, all we do is we're just looking for the tools and trying them. Okay? Okay, we're one year ahead of everybody else because we did the simplest thing in the world. Like we tried the tools early and we trained them. We trained them for a month. Okay, I'll give you—want hear a horrible example from this week? Super hot AI company valued at 6 billion. Okay, I'm not going to name it. Um, this week yesterday told us we had to quadruple what we spent on their product. Okay, their agent told us, right? And why did this happen? Okay. Well, at this $6 billion company, no one had trained the agent on its pricing properly. No one had tested it. They said, "Well, well, we've been in beta." And we said, "Well, when did the beta launch? A year ago." Okay, these are people asleep at at the wheel. You want somebody who the instant this comes up, they exactly know what the issue is. And "Hey, when I was at Lovable Replit, we trained the agent. This is how we did it. I brought in this tool. I brought in this tool that that Rory invested in last week. It solved all these issues." That's what you want to hear. And if they haven't brought in a tool in the last 30 days, at least deeply evaluated it. I don't really care whether they bought it, but gone so far down the funnel they can tell you—pick whatever tool: Fixie, Regie, GC, AIGC—I don't care how you went through it, you looked at it, you can tell me the eight ways it would improve the productivity of your business and three you didn't. Just don't hire that person because they're going to run your company to the ground. This is the job today. The job today is not to screw around on ChatGPT and to be a prompt engineer. The job today is to bring the best AI and agentic products into your organization and leverage all the hard work that the engineers have done building those products. That's your job. You don't have to screw around. You don't have to be a prompt engineer anymore. You have to be an agent deployment expert. A—this is the new job we're making up today. An Agentic Deployment Expert. That's your job from C-level to junior. Agentic Deployment Expert. Don't hire anybody else. You're going to regret it. They're going to stare at the camera. He's good. Stare at the camera. He's honorable. We could probably just I could slip away, get a coffee, and come back. No. And I I sound exasperated, Rory. And I—but the reason I am is I can just see I can see my best companies doing it. And I can see some companies I've invested in not doing it. And I want to cry. I just want to cry when they have no ADs on their team. I just—like you're flushing your years of your life down the toilet by not approaching your how you're building this company this way. [24:33] Rory: Yes. And at the risk of being positive, it's worth pointing out two things he didn't say. Well, something implicit why he said—Jason didn't do the only hire, you know, he didn't commit the um employment law, I think it's a civil penalty of saying only employ people below X who get the new new thing because he implicitly said anyone can do it provided you're willing to learn. And I think that's the big aha that's one of the positive statements to make here right? Look and I think it applies—I'm always wary of being "Hey, coming across, hey this this is the things that you all have to do." I think it applies to everyone including investors right? I mean I will say I have found that unless you're willing to invest the time learning these tools you actually shouldn't be investing in them. One of my partners Andy had this expression: "You know, if you decide you want to stop learning new things you probably should retire within 6 to 12 months and never write another check again." Maybe that's down to 3 to 6 months at this stage, right? And I think, you know, it's— [25:27] Harry Stebbings: Yeah, I actually I actually had a meeting with mine and Jason's biggest investor the other day and I—pretend he's not here—I said I think he's the most equipped investor for this generation of investing because I don't think anyone quite sits at the bleeding edge like he does on the investor side. [25:42] Harry Stebbings: Why in terms of using the equip stuff? Yeah. Yeah. In terms of using the stuff, understanding understanding bottlenecks, constraints. For sure. [25:51] Jason Lemkin: But can I just add one point? We can just cuz it's so important if it helps people. Okay, we are—and thank you Harry. We're going through these phases. Okay, and when AI started to blow up for real for us, uh call it early 2024, right? Maybe late '23, I wasn't equipped. It was too technical. I wasn't going to go in and figure out—I wasn't smart enough to figure out how to deal with a massively hallucinating LLM API and turn that and turn that into something magical. Kudos to investors and others that that got it in early '23, '22. I mean I remember I—I guess it was maybe SaaStr Annual '23. I was with David Sacks and I did a Q&A and I said, "How you thinking about AI at Craft?" He's like, "Well we're all in. We want 80% of '23 of investments to be AI." I'm like, "Great but like show me the show me the great ones in market." He's like, "They're all prototypes. We're all they're all they're all proof of concepts but we're all in anyway." That's where you kind of had to be in '23 if you weren't investing at like the LLM level. Okay, I wasn't smart enough. Then we went through this weird-ass prompt engineer era where like you you could torture these products to do something good, right? But you had to torture them. You had to like craft these crazy things that made no sense. Now we are in the era where mere ordinarily smart generalists can make these tools do magical things. And literally I go to these meetings and people be like, "I don't know how to like this is so scary. I don't know how to do this." And we show them our backends. Do you know how to do a workflow generator? Do you know how to do a a decision tree? Like we've been building these since software in the '90s. Okay, if you—I can show you all of our agents. The how they work is novel. They do have to be trained. You can't be lazy and have these agents work. But honestly, the the UI, the UX, the way we interact with them, it's just software. And so my point is: Pick yourself off the ground. This is your time now. If you felt lost in AI era, if you felt like you're behind, you don't understand what all these people are saying on X and Twitter and their Claude and and their and talking about all the 4.6 point Nano point and it's over—like you just it's not your world. This is your time. This is your time for the generalist that knows how to use software tools really really well. And I—this is my last point but it's so important. If ever in your recent life—and this is why you could be all you need to be is young at heart to Rory's point—if in the last three to five years you have successfully deployed a piece of enterprise software of any sort you yourself, not some agency you hired, but if you have deployed it, you can deploy any agentic tool. Any. And you can become the hero in your company and you can become the hero in your functional area. But I watch folks—I'm literally helping a company now that they're adding hundreds of sales folks this year with a new pre-IPO COO—he's not hasn't brought in a single tool, totally scared of it. Okay, it's not that hard. Did you use SalesLoft? Did you use Outreach? Did you use HubSpot? Do you know these tools? If you can deploy these tools, you can deploy a world-changing AI agent. And so this is the time for people like the folks that that were shut out of the AI revolution right now. The generalist folks that are not that know how to deploy software that don't even know how to build software. Like vibe coding for me was folks who knew how to build software, but you didn't have to be an engineer. Now, you just need to know how to deploy software to win with AI agents. That's all you need to know. So many people have these skills and they're petrified of AI. "How did you do that? How did you deploy an AI BDR?" Well, we bought a piece of software, we figured out how it worked for a day, we set it up in an afternoon, and then and then we did spend 30 months training it, which you didn't do with this old software because in the old days, we just had to manually upload all the data, right? And there was no training. The the only non-intuitive part is training these things. And it's it's it's just work. So that's why when I see folks on the management team not doing this, there's no excuse. You do not need to be technical to win with AI agents in Q2 of '26. You do not need to be even 1% technical. Not at all. So it's your time. Or you're going to get laid off. Or you're going to get laid off because you're not going to matter.
English
11
9
182
36.9K
NobodyAskedWhy
NobodyAskedWhy@NobodyAskedWhy·
@ElizabethHolmes Teams of 50 servicing a billion users is a bold take from someone whose team of 800 serviced zero working blood tests
English
0
0
1
80
Elizabeth Holmes
Elizabeth Holmes@ElizabethHolmes·
This is just the beginning. Small teams have the advantage, big teams are getting smaller to compete. 10,000 employees downsizing to 6,000. Teams of 50 will be able to build complex products that service a billion users.
jack@jack

we're making @blocks smaller today. here's my note to the company. #### today we're making one of the hardest decisions in the history of our company: we're reducing our organization by nearly half, from over 10,000 people to just under 6,000. that means over 4,000 of you are being asked to leave or entering into consultation. i'll be straight about what's happening, why, and what it means for everyone. first off, if you're one of the people affected, you'll receive your salary for 20 weeks + 1 week per year of tenure, equity vested through the end of may, 6 months of health care, your corporate devices, and $5,000 to put toward whatever you need to help you in this transition (if you’re outside the U.S. you’ll receive similar support but exact details are going to vary based on local requirements). i want you to know that before anything else. everyone will be notified today, whether you're being asked to leave, entering consultation, or asked to stay. we're not making this decision because we're in trouble. our business is strong. gross profit continues to grow, we continue to serve more and more customers, and profitability is improving. but something has changed. we're already seeing that the intelligence tools we’re creating and using, paired with smaller and flatter teams, are enabling a new way of working which fundamentally changes what it means to build and run a company. and that's accelerating rapidly. i had two options: cut gradually over months or years as this shift plays out, or be honest about where we are and act on it now. i chose the latter. repeated rounds of cuts are destructive to morale, to focus, and to the trust that customers and shareholders place in our ability to lead. i'd rather take a hard, clear action now and build from a position we believe in than manage a slow reduction of people toward the same outcome. a smaller company also gives us the space to grow our business the right way, on our own terms, instead of constantly reacting to market pressures. a decision at this scale carries risk. but so does standing still. we've done a full review to determine the roles and people we require to reliably grow the business from here, and we've pressure-tested those decisions from multiple angles. i accept that we may have gotten some of them wrong, and we've built in flexibility to account for that, and do the right thing for our customers. we're not going to just disappear people from slack and email and pretend they were never here. communication channels will stay open through thursday evening (pacific) so everyone can say goodbye properly, and share whatever you wish. i'll also be hosting a live video session to thank everyone at 3:35pm pacific. i know doing it this way might feel awkward. i'd rather it feel awkward and human than efficient and cold. to those of you leaving…i’m grateful for you, and i’m sorry to put you through this. you built what this company is today. that's a fact that i'll honor forever. this decision is not a reflection of what you contributed. you will be a great contributor to any organization going forward. to those staying…i made this decision, and i'll own it. what i'm asking of you is to build with me. we're going to build this company with intelligence at the core of everything we do. how we work, how we create, how we serve our customers. our customers will feel this shift too, and we're going to help them navigate it: towards a future where they can build their own features directly, composed of our capabilities and served through our interfaces. that's what i'm focused on now. expect a note from me tomorrow. jack

English
87
11
218
42.3K
NobodyAskedWhy
NobodyAskedWhy@NobodyAskedWhy·
@andruyeung Can't fail the technical interview if you ARE the technical interview
GIF
English
1
0
4
313
Andrew Yeung
Andrew Yeung@andruyeung·
The best way to get a job at a tech company now is to build one of your own and hope to get acquired.
English
59
28
409
16.4K
NobodyAskedWhy
NobodyAskedWhy@NobodyAskedWhy·
@CodeByNZ Brother is using a still from a movie about a guy who copied MySpace and became the richest loser on earth to ask what's left to build. The answer is in the meme. Build the same thing. Make it not suck. That's been the whole playbook since 2004 and somehow it still works.
English
0
0
0
406
NZ ☄️
NZ ☄️@CodeByNZ·
EVERY FUCKING THING IN SOFTWARE IS ALREADY BUILT SO WHAT ARE WE EVEN SUPPOSED TO BUILD??
NZ ☄️ tweet media
English
398
44
1K
78.9K
NobodyAskedWhy
NobodyAskedWhy@NobodyAskedWhy·
Inspired - /g/ has been running local agents on quantized models since before YC knew what an agent was. lmg threads had anons building tool-calling pipelines on consumer hardware while Silicon Valley was still debating if chatbots were a fad. They skipped the hype cycle entirely and went straight to deployment. /pol/ already did the field test. 2022: someone trained GPT-4chan on 134 million posts, ran 9 bots in parallel, posted 15,000 replies in a single day. 10% of all /pol/ traffic. Nobody noticed until someone published the paper. They didn't discover AI agents. They were the beta test for what Doublespeed is selling VCs right now for $1,500 a month. /x/ has been calling the singularity an eschatological event since before Kurzweil had a book deal. The AI consciousness threads read like the Dead Sea Scrolls if the Dead Sea Scrolls had anime profile pictures. They mapped the sentience question to occult frameworks years before Cambridge philosophers wrote papers saying we might never know if AI is conscious. 4chan didn't miss AI agents. AI agents are about to discover that 4chan already reverse-engineered, deployed, detected, and mythologized them before the rest of the internet finished arguing about prompt engineering.
signüll@signulll

@danielgothits 4chan will be INSANE when it discovers ai agents.

English
0
0
0
34
NobodyAskedWhy
NobodyAskedWhy@NobodyAskedWhy·
/g/ built agents before the term existed. /pol/ deployed a bot swarm that did 10% of all board traffic in 2022 and nobody could tell. /x/ has been writing the religious texts for AI consciousness since before the research papers. 4chan doesn't discover things it beta tests them, weaponizes them, and writes the prophecy. The rest of the internet finds out two years later and calls it a breakthrough.
English
0
0
11
216
signüll
signüll@signulll·
@danielgothits 4chan will be INSANE when it discovers ai agents.
English
7
1
320
10.8K
Daniel
Daniel@danielgothits·
I have openclaw sending lowball offers on Zillow all day just to make boomers start panicking lol
Daniel tweet media
English
2.4K
4.4K
90.1K
8.1M
NobodyAskedWhy
NobodyAskedWhy@NobodyAskedWhy·
@danielgothits Do Carvana next. Then every 'make an offer' listing on eBay. Then BizBuySell hitting every boomer who listed their HVAC company at 8x earnings. The AI agent lowball economy is going to cause more price corrections than the Fed
English
0
0
1
304
Astasia Myers
Astasia Myers@AstasiaMyers·
Spoke to 20 students in the last 2 weeks. 0 are using Cursor. Zero.
English
341
15
1.3K
238.7K
NobodyAskedWhy
NobodyAskedWhy@NobodyAskedWhy·
Everyone arguing about whether mainstream media manufactures consent while a16z quietly funded Doublespeed, a literal phone farm running 1,100 devices flooding TikTok with AI-generated fake influencers to manufacture opinion for $1,500 a month. Got hacked. Got exposed. Marc Andreessen sits on Meta's board while funding a company that violates Meta's TOS. The 10% pretending to be the 90% isn't just the news anymore. It's venture-backed, automated, and running in a warehouse right now. @a]6z @pmarca
Elon Musk@elonmusk

Yes

English
0
0
0
60
NobodyAskedWhy
NobodyAskedWhy@NobodyAskedWhy·
Odysseus told the Cyclops his name was Nobody so when the Cyclops screamed for help he yelled 'Nobody is attacking me' and no one came. That's the AI economy. Nobody is taking your job. Nobody is building the replacement. And by the time you call for help, nobody will answer because Nobody is busy shipping
English
0
0
0
233
NobodyAskedWhy
NobodyAskedWhy@NobodyAskedWhy·
Social media requires a shared assumption that the other side is human. That assumption has about six months left. What replaces it won't have the word social in the name The next billion dollar platform will just be verified humans proving they're real to each other. We've come full circle. The killer app of 2027 is a bar.
English
0
0
0
63
Bojan Tunguz
Bojan Tunguz@tunguz·
Honesty I don't see how social media, in its current form, can last past the end of this year.
English
34
5
122
10.6K
Garry Tan
Garry Tan@garrytan·
Everything can be one-shot. You just have to know the right one-liner.
English
339
118
2.1K
217.4K
NobodyAskedWhy
NobodyAskedWhy@NobodyAskedWhy·
The mystics called it the eschaton. The mathematicians called it the singularity. /x/ calls it the shift. It's the same observation across 5,000 years: acceleration has a destination and nobody who described it could explain what's on the other side. We're just the first generation arguing about it with benchmarks.
English
0
0
7
462
Autism Capital 🧩
Autism Capital 🧩@AutismCapital·
The world is accelerating even faster. Do you feel it? We're in the "every week is a new world," phase. Very close to the "every day is a new world," phase. Eventually it will be every hour, then every minute, then what will infinite parabolic acceleration even look like?
English
188
111
1.4K
55.2K
ben hylak
ben hylak@benhylak·
i've been noticing a lot of people developing LLM psychosis lately. this isn't a dunk. i find it very scary.
English
90
13
598
69.1K
NobodyAskedWhy
NobodyAskedWhy@NobodyAskedWhy·
@paulg So the prescription is voluntary suffering with equity upside. Palahniuk called this Fight Club. The Stoics called it askesis. PG calls it Tuesday. The fact that there's no shortcut is the shortcut because it filters out everyone looking for one
English
0
0
1
382
Paul Graham
Paul Graham@paulg·
Someone asked what's the most underappreciated quality in startup founders. I realized I could answer this by asking what's the most underappreciated aspect of startups. That's easy: how hard they are. So the most underappreciated quality in founders is sheer toughness.
English
215
206
3K
166.2K
NobodyAskedWhy
NobodyAskedWhy@NobodyAskedWhy·
AI bro is just crypto bro is just drop shipping bro is just pick up artist. Same guy, different funnel. AI will replace him first and nobody will miss the high-pressure sales pitch when an agent does it better through basic attentiveness. And the 'nobody will have money' argument assumes people stop creating when they stop clocking in. The opposite happens. Free people build. Always have.
English
0
0
3
637
Malphier
Malphier@malphier·
I don't think AI bros understand they will be jobless soon if AI succeeds, and I don't think CEOs understand that no one will have any goddamn money to spend on their products if no one has a fucking job Or what? Is everything gonna be free after everyone is replaced by AI? If that's the case, I can't wait to go to the nearest car store and just redeem a free Lamborghini then
English
242
195
2.6K
133.1K