Vikas Malpani|Building ReBillion🇮🇳

6.8K posts

Vikas Malpani|Building ReBillion🇮🇳

Vikas Malpani|Building ReBillion🇮🇳

@vikasmalpani

Agentic AI for US RealEstate Offices| https://t.co/lY3HMFyNpx | Past Live Audio/Video- https://t.co/eVHNbB929N | MIT TR35 Innovator| 1 Exit $200mn ~ Co-Founder CommonFloor

Bangalore Katılım Ocak 2009
333 Takip Edilen3.4K Takipçiler
Vikas Malpani|Building ReBillion🇮🇳
@monatherealtor The 'small pivots' point holds up especially this year. The agents I've watched adapt best didn't overhaul everything — they tightened one thing, usually the buyer consultation, and let it compound. Consistency on the small stuff beats a dramatic reinvention every time.
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Mona Leonard, P.A., REALTOR, MBA, RRT
With every goal comes challenges, but those challenges are part of the process, not a reason to stop. Shifting strategies, staying consistent, and keeping the bigger picture in mind can make all the difference. Small pivots often lead to the biggest breakthroughs! #realtor
Mona Leonard, P.A., REALTOR, MBA, RRT tweet media
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Vikas Malpani|Building ReBillion🇮🇳
@TanyaCurry1 Congrats on opening escrow. The first 72 hours are quietly the most important stretch of the file — earnest money in, inspections booked, disclosures out early. Move those fast and the back half tends to run itself. Hope this one's a smooth close.
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Vikas Malpani|Building ReBillion🇮🇳
@PSNHomes The 10-second test mostly happens on the phone now, before anyone walks in — if the first three listing photos don't land, the in-person first impression never gets its shot. Photo order ends up mattering as much as the staging itself.
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Vikas Malpani|Building ReBillion🇮🇳
@ingmaester The self-care day getting ambushed by a 2pm showing is painfully real. What finally helped me was telling buyers up front there's a same-day cutoff — most are totally fine with 'first thing tomorrow' once you actually say it out loud. Otherwise the day evaporates every time.
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Vikas Malpani|Building ReBillion🇮🇳
@carolyncarnes 62 under contract against 69 closed is the number I'd watch most — pendings trailing closings two months running tends to signal a shift before the active count ever moves. Reads pretty balanced for May. Seeing any days-on-market creep in Walton?
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Vikas Malpani|Building ReBillion🇮🇳
Most will read this as a 22% layoff. The real signal is the million-dollar salary band underneath it. The org isn't shrinking, it's bifurcating: a thin tier of operators who run on AI and get paid like athletes, and everyone else. Headcount-to-output just got repriced for good.
Zeb Evans@DJ_CURFEW

Today we reduced headcount by 22%. The business is the strongest it's ever been. So I think it's important to be direct about what I'm seeing and why. First, I made this decision and I own it. I did it because the way to operate at the highest level of productivity is changing, and to win the future, ClickUp needs to change with it. Second, this wasn't about cutting costs. Most savings from this change will flow directly back into the people who stay. We'll be introducing million-dollar salary bands. If you create outsized impact using AI, you'll be paid outside of traditional bands. Most importantly, I have the deepest gratitude for those affected. We're doing this from a position of strength specifically so we can take care of people properly. Everyone affected receives a package aimed at honoring their contributions and easing the transition. I only see two options: wait for this to play out gradually in the market or be honest about what I'm seeing and act proactively. THE 100X ORGANIZATION The primary change is that we're restructuring around what I call 100x org. The goal is 100x output. The roles required to build at the highest level are fundamentally different than they were a year ago. Incremental improvements to existing systems won't get us there. We need new ones. That means creating enough disruption to rebuild rather than iterate on what's already broken. The common narrative is that AI makes everyone more productive. It doesn't. Many of the workflows of today, if left unchanged, create bottlenecks in AI systems. These roles will evolve. But waiting for that to happen naturally means falling behind now. The 100x org is actually heavily dependent on people - infinitely more than today. This is only possible with 10x people that have embraced and adopted new ways of working. THE BUILDERS, AGENT MANAGERS, AND FRONT-LINERS — THE BUILDERS: 10X ENGINEERS I don't think most companies have internalized what's actually happening with AI in engineering. The common narrative is that AI makes all engineers more productive. That may be true in isolation, but at an organization level - that is the farthest thing from reality. Here's what we've validated recently at ClickUp: the great engineers, the ones who can orchestrate, architect, and review, are becoming 100x engineers. They're not writing code. They're directing agents that write code. The skill is judgment. AI makes the best engineers wildly more productive, and everyone else using AI slows these engineers down. Think about it - the bottlenecks are (1) orchestration - telling AI what to do, and (2) reviewing - what AI did. Everything is leapfrogged and no longer needed. So who do you want orchestrating and reviewing code? And how do you want your best engineers to spend their time? If your best engineers are spending time reviewing other people's code, then this is inherently an inefficient bottleneck. These engineers can review their agent's code much faster than reviewing human code. The new world is about enabling your 10x engineers to become 100x. The wrong strategy is to push every engineer to use infinite tokens. Companies doing this are celebrating 500% more pull requests. But customer outcomes don't match the volume of code being generated. I call this the great reckoning of AI coding, and every company will face this soon if not already. More code is just another bottleneck to the best engineers, and ultimately to your company's impact as well. — THE BUILDERS: 10X PRODUCT MANAGERS Product management and design roles are merging. Designers that have customer focus, become more like product managers. And product managers that have intuition for UX become more like designers. The bottleneck of user research is gone. It takes us just one mention of an agent to kickoff research and analyze results. The bottleneck of product <> design iteration is also gone. The product builder iterates on their own, along with agents and skills that ensure alignment with quality and strategy. Also controversial today - I believe that the wrong strategy is to have your PMs shipping code - that just introduces another bottleneck that the best engineers will waste their time on. To be clear, PMs should be coding but they should do this in a playground to iterate, validate, and scope. That code should not go to production. Everything outside of managing systems, orchestrating AI, and reviewing output becomes a bottleneck. That's why the other roles that are critical along with these are the systems managers (to reduce bottlenecks) along with a bottleneck you can't replace - customer meeting time. — THE SYSTEM MANAGERS Ironically, the people that automate their jobs with AI will always have a job. They become owners of the AI systems - agent managers. We have many examples of these people at ClickUp. The underlying systems in which we operate are absolutely critical to get right. I think most companies are delusional to think they can iterate on existing systems and compete in this new world. You must create enough disruption so that old systems are deprecated entirely. If there's any definition for 'AI native' that's what it is. — THE FRONT-LINERS In a world that will become saturated with AI communication, the human touch will matter more than anything to customers. This is a bottleneck that you shouldn't replace - even when agents are high enough quality to do video meetings. One-on-one meeting time with customers is something that shouldn't be automated. The systems around the meetings should be - so that front-liners spend nearly 100% of their time with customers. REWARDING 100X IMPACT In a world where companies are able to do so much more with less, where does that excess money go? In our case, much of the savings in this new operating model will flow directly back to those that enabled it. We must reward people that create productivity accordingly. This aligns incentives on both sides. Plus, in a world where your best people create 100x impact, you can't afford to lose them. You should aim to retain these employees for decades. The context they have and their ability to efficiently orchestrate and review will be nearly impossible to replace. Compensation bands of today should be thrown out the door. We're introducing $1 million cash/year salary bands with a path available to nearly everyone in the company if they produce 100x impact by creating or managing AI systems. THE FUTURE Nearly every company will make changes like these. The ones that do it proactively will define what comes next. The future is not fewer people. It's different work, new roles, and better rewards for those who embrace it. We're already seeing entirely new roles emerge, like Agent Managers, that didn't exist a year ago. ClickUp is positioning to lead this shift, not just internally, but for our customers too. I've never been more certain about where we're headed.

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Vikas Malpani|Building ReBillion🇮🇳
@siddarthpaim My bet: India's first trillion-dollar tech company won't sell IP or chips. It'll turn the services economy India already dominates into an agent platform, selling outcomes instead of seats. The trillion-dollar wedge is the thing India is already the best in the world at.
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Siddarth Pai
Siddarth Pai@siddarthpaim·
First trillion-dollar company from India will be built on technology. Possibly a company that is less than 10 years old today. By 2040, India’s biggest value creation may not come from legacy conglomerates, but from IP, platforms, AI, semiconductors, defense tech, energy software, or sovereign infrastructure. The next Reliance or Tata may look more like a frontier tech company.
Siddarth Pai tweet media
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Vikas Malpani|Building ReBillion🇮🇳
@patrickc @p0 @mpp Friction was only half of why micropayments failed. The other half: content never had a price. Agents paying per-access give a single article or fact real-time price discovery for the first time. The story isn't frictionless paywalls, it's the whole web getting a spot price.
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Patrick Collison
Patrick Collison@patrickc·
Cool release from @p0. I think this use-case (agents paying content creators for access via @mpp) will be very big. Micropayment walls haven't worked (as Clay Shirky anticipated many years ago) because of human cognitive overhead, but agents can make arbitrarily granular determinations without decision fatigue.
Parallel Web Systems@p0

Today we're launching Index: a platform for content owners to understand how AI agents use their work, and earn revenue when they do. Our first partners include @TheAtlantic, @FortuneMagazine, @PRNewswire, @PitchBook, @ZoomInfo, @Tracxn, @RocketReachCo, @enigma_data, @fiscal_ai, plus creators @alexeheath, @mariogabriele @azeem, @every, and @packyM.

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Vikas Malpani|Building ReBillion🇮🇳
@ycombinator This isn't a gift, it's customer acquisition. OpenAI is buying the default model choice of a whole founder generation before they write a line of code. Credits run out; integration habits don't. Real question: is a free token grant the cheapest decade of lock-in ever sold?
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Y Combinator
Y Combinator@ycombinator·
OpenAI is offering $2M in tokens to every YC company in the spring and summer batches. We extended the summer deadline to May 25 so more founders can get in on it. ycombinator.com/apply
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Vikas Malpani|Building ReBillion🇮🇳
The shift for builders: AI stops being a faith trade and becomes a numbers business. Price your product, your raise and your roadmap as if the comps are already public. In six months, they are. I break down moves like this twice a day. Follow for the next one.
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Vikas Malpani|Building ReBillion🇮🇳
The contrarian read: this IPO is a constraint, not a victory lap. A public OpenAI can't out-spend rivals quietly anymore. My bet: within a year of listing, OpenAI ships its first real cost-cutting story, and the market cheers it.
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Vikas Malpani|Building ReBillion🇮🇳
OpenAI is about to become the first AI lab priced by people who don't believe in AGI. A confidential IPO filing lands as early as today, targeting a listing above $1 trillion by September. The mission era of AI is ending. The public-markets era starts now.
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Vikas Malpani|Building ReBillion🇮🇳
Hark just raised $700M at a $6B valuation with no product shipped. Brett Adcock's bet: you don't win personal AI by owning one layer. You build the models, the software and the device as one stack. The era of picking a single layer of AI is closing.
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