The Truth About Building AI Startups Today
Ғылым және технология
In the first episode of the Lightcone Podcast, YC Group Partners dig into everything they have learned working with the top founders building AI startups today. They share the ideas that are working particularly well, mistakes to avoid, and take a look at the competitive landscape among the current AI giants.
Chapters (Powered by bit.ly/chapterme-yc) -
00:00 Intro
00:41 The Lightcone Podcast
01:53 YC Recent Batch
03:34 College Students and AI Startups
04:44 AI Startup Success Factors
05:53 Opportunities in Mundane AI Tasks
07:30 Beware of "Tarpit Ideas"
09:36 AI Integration into UIs
10:30 Avoiding the "Checkbox Mentality"
11:54 Focus on Genuine Use Cases
13:45 Fine-Tuning Open-Source Models
15:20 Data Privacy Concerns
17:09 Purpose-Trained AI Models
18:36 AI Models for Prototyping
19:45 Surge in Startup Ideas
20:54 The "GPT Wrapper" Term
22:02 Importance of UX
23:39 Focus on Specific Problems
25:03 AI Agents and Open-Source AI
26:58 Resurgence of AI Researcher-Founders
30:15 Periodic Dismissal of Emerging Tech
32:06 Outro
Пікірлер: 401
What are you building with AI right now?
@PrincessKushana
3 ай бұрын
Ecommerce shopping agent & AI ethics research.
@peterkirkham4585
3 ай бұрын
Props AI - A cost monitoring tool for Open AI spend
@sang459
3 ай бұрын
Artificial English tutor that understands your situation and needs - writes email for your English speaking boss, prepares you for a job interview in your specific industry, etc.
@JDreamer200-nr2ws
3 ай бұрын
How do I get funding? I want to bring AI powered Vtubers to the masses. I am also working on custom chatbots
@arjoai
3 ай бұрын
Mitra - build AI teams that do anything
30 minutes is about the perfect length for a podcast episode 👌
@mattm6178
2 ай бұрын
4 you. i perfer 3 hours.
@thenovu_ai
23 күн бұрын
A lot of info
I love how this is pretty off the cuff. Gives me a good idea of the actual, unscripted personalities of the group partners, and what they’re like in a group. Awesome guys!
@photon2724
3 ай бұрын
They feel more human haha!
Love the energy and maturity around the topic! Waiting for Ep2!
love the modeling around "if a company isn't buying your co-pilot, just build their company with co-pilot and beat them" because if your co-pilot can't level up a company enough to be better than your potential client, then you probably aren't providing enough value.
@ryanslab302
2 ай бұрын
The hubris in that idea.
@salo1129
2 ай бұрын
@@ryanslab302 Exactly! These people are so delusional. What they are saying is if your little chatbot tool is good enough, you can become better and bigger than your potential client. So if I am trying to sell a chatbot to Tesla, and they don't buy it. All I should do is start another Tesla because my chabot brings so much value that I can successfully out compete any company without any experience, passion, expertise, or domain knowledge.
@slickvik4508
2 ай бұрын
It's a moronic take.
@janirobe
Ай бұрын
then the company just implements the co-pilot once you start getting traction...
@BenjaminKing1
24 күн бұрын
@@janirobe ok, so if it took them that long to catch up on one thing, you use your smaller company speed to keep ahead.
Chapters (Powered by ChapterMe) - 00:00 - Intro: Differentiating Startup Ideas 00:48 - The Light Cone" Podcast 01:53 - Y Combinator's Recent Batch 03:34 - College Students and AI Startups 04:44 - AI Startup Success Factors 05:53 - Opportunities in Mundane AI Tasks 07:43 - Beware of "Tarpit Ideas" 08:30 - AI Copilot 09:36 - AI Integration into UIs 10:30 - Avoiding the "Checkbox Mentality" 11:54 - Focus on Genuine Use Cases 13:45 - Fine-Tuning Open-Source Models 15:20 - Data Privacy Concerns 16:31 - Purpose-Trained AI Models 18:36 - AI Models for Prototyping 19:45 - Surge in Startup Ideas 20:54 - The "GPT Wrapper" Term: Importance of UX 22:20 - Building a billion-dollar AI company: Focus on Specific Problems 24:16 - AI-Powered Voice Agents 25:50 - Advocacy for Open-Source AI 26:58 - Resurgence of AI Researcher-Founders 29:36 - Returning YC to Its Roots 30:20 - Periodic Dismissal of Emerging Tech 30:55 - Classic Hacker News Essay: The New Cycle of Tech Geeks 32:06 - Outro
@rembautimes8808
2 ай бұрын
Very good summary
@chapterme
2 ай бұрын
@@rembautimes8808 thank you 😊
@nathanbrannan5228
2 ай бұрын
Clever ;)
@chapterme
2 ай бұрын
@@nathanbrannan5228 Thanks 🙃
@MrMadvillan
2 ай бұрын
now i can skip to whatever complete trash their taking about
It's not everday that YC launches a new podcast! Love the name and the content, keep em coming!
Excited to see where this podcast goes! lots of things to learn from you guys! thanks!
This is very insightful! Keep up the good work, team YC!
Best video I watched in a while. Thank you! It's good to have validation that what we are doing is correct.
Thanks guys. This video inspired me to implement LLM to a feature I’m currently building for my startup. How come i didn’t think about it that way 😊
"Mundane tasks and boring work"! Love this! Thanks for the inspiring conversation
This is an excellent conversation straight from the source of one of the best places tech is born. Thanks for starting this Y Combinator Team. I do so many tech startup interviews myself as a host for Grit Daily mag its refreshing to see what Y Combinator sees as important to discuss.
What a great ending, man! as well as the whole podcast
Absolutely amazing talk very bright panel
Great episode, looking forward to more!👌🏿
Thank you. Interesting times. Look forward to more episodes!
Absolutely phenomenal, cant wait for the next episodes
Really like the format and the wisdom here!
Another day, another YC Classic.
Yo plz don't give up on this podcast. Looking forward to ep 100!
@thenovu_ai
23 күн бұрын
yes sir
The analogy of LLM as FPGA of idea prototyping is quite apt !
Working in an AI startup, I can vouch for these observations. They were on point, to which we are working on right now!
I feel like this is the start of something special.
@mattm6178
2 ай бұрын
same, in no other circumstance you have this level of intelligence converge on a podcast for any reason.
Thank you for this podcast.
Thank you for this podcast, you gave me the idea of taking 3 Google Cloud certifications: Cloud Architect, Data Engineer, Machine Learning Engineer to create one of the companies that you recommended to do. Your reviews are really helpful. Thank you 😃
Thank you very much guys for that amazing episode , helpful insights ❤
love this! keep it up ,please!!
Thank you for this conversation!
This is the best thing happening on the internet right now!🔥
thanks for this Gary 👍
Good content - Go YC! Great to see Diana there too!
Most of the problems are like ages old. When tech meet use cases, they seem like strange to each other. So many mundane tasks are around us, and just a little bit calibration, these job would intrigue people's potential rather than make them age faster. Talk to the people in different industries, understand them, are so important.
I love the episode, it's really insightful and would love to have more. But I would like it if most of the acronyms used could be outlined to help those unfamiliar with them add them to their vocabulary. Thank you
very insightful, keep it coming! thanks for sharing
@thenovu_ai
23 күн бұрын
yes
Love the genesis of the Lightcone name, Jared :) Looking forward to more of these chats.
Great to hear your insights. I look forward to more!
I love this conversation! It's about time
The difference is: MySQL doesn’t have a consumer facing product. And in SaaS, the user interactions are much more complex. In Chat based software, it’s the same interaction. And there’s a consumer facing app already. 22:45 This means the barriers to entry are low, which means endless substitutes, which means you'll compete on price (race to the bottom)... low margins, low top line... this isn't rocket science.
@sang459
3 ай бұрын
Agreed
@Duarte_martins
3 ай бұрын
That works both ways though. It means open source will likely win in the end since all it takes is one massive LLM to be trained so OAI and the like will lose their moat. I actually think access to chips will likely be the limiting factor, and I can see arguments for both OSS and closed source there.
00:00 - Intro: Differentiating Startup Ideas 00:48 - The Light Cone" Podcast 01:53 - Y Combinator's Recent Batch 03:34 - College Students and AI Startups 04:44 - AI Startup Success Factors 05:53 - Opportunities in Mundane AI Tasks 07:43 - Beware of "Tarpit Ideas" 08:30 - AI Copilot 09:36 - AI Integration into UIs 10:30 - Avoiding the "Checkbox Mentality" 11:54 - Focus on Genuine Use Cases 13:45 - Fine-Tuning Open-Source Models 15:20 - Data Privacy Concerns 16:31 - Purpose-Trained AI Models 18:36 - AI Models for Prototyping 19:45 - Surge in Startup Ideas 20:54 - The "GPT Wrapper" Term: Importance of UX 22:20 - Building a billion-dollar AI company: Focus on Specific Problems 24:16 - AI-Powered Voice Agents 25:50 - Advocacy for Open-Source AI 26:58 - Resurgence of AI Researcher-Founders 29:36 - Returning YC to Its Roots 30:20 - Periodic Dismissal of Emerging Tech 30:55 - Classic Hacker News Essay: The New Cycle of Tech Geeks 32:06 - Outro
@thenovu_ai
23 күн бұрын
Thanks for doing this.
@thenovu_ai
23 күн бұрын
How would you do it for my vids?
This is a gem. every minute is packed with good ideas.
Key takeaway: "SaaS is just a DataBase Wrapper", golden phrase right there.
@prave0101
3 ай бұрын
Jeez, the subtitles kept showing Rapper, first I was like what ! Then I rationalized it saying as GPTs are language models spewing words they in a light heart calling it Rapper
Honestly, I feel like the gold rush around AI and LLMs is creating this negative pressure on the rest of the ecosystem. I think it's pretty likely that we're going to see a huge consolidation in the LLM space in the coming years and there will be a few huge winners and lots of small losers. My hot take is that now is paradoxically the best time to found startups that *aren't* banking on AI and LLMs. Lots of people are going to waste lots of time trying to shoehorn LLMs into spaces they don't belong and fail, and it's a great time to get ahead. You were talking about AI tarpits, I think it's not that there are a few tarpits, but that AI is a giant tarpit with a few paradise-like islands. Build something great while others are swimming in the tar.
@realnapster1522
3 ай бұрын
Every startup can be a tar pit if you can’t raise funding 😅
@BlueRockYT
2 ай бұрын
I agree completely, it seems like the pressure is making people ignore huge red flags, such as the fact that so many startups are based on the behaviour of openAIs models that can change on a daily basis.
Dang! This was great pod! Keep it going guys. :-)
I love your videos, continue pls
This is an incredible episode
The Interview with the CEO of Hugging Face and their partnership with IBM is insightful. The tarpit analogy is great. Yes, don’t disrupt workflows that ppl are familiar with. That’s especially true in healthcare. Change it over time. Chats will not go away soon. Encouraging students to drop uni is not the best idea.
PromptArmour is actually changing the game! Can't wait to see what they do next!
TY, really interesting discussion
Great job guys/gals very inspiring stuff.
Love this podcast. One quick suggestion, the light cone is not exactly the definition you mentioned in the beginning. It's related to time and light speed so that have the cone shape. Just a suggestion.
Great episode!
A half hour is very brief. I'd love to hear more about how you see the world.
@ycombinator
Ай бұрын
Don’t worry we post a new episode of Lightcone every two weeks
Light cone is such a cool and appropriate name, and the explanation deserves a little expansion: Alpha centauri is 4 light years away, so any choice I make today will only affect alpha centauri 4 years from now, at the earliest, because nothing can travel faster than light. If you plot a spacetime graph of all the events throughout the universe that I could theoretically have an impact on, that graph will form a cone shape, which is why it's called a light cone. A very apt metaphor for starting a company that will shape the future!
So is AI a solution in search of a problem?
This was excellent.
The Video Just started and ver talked about the general theory of relativity, oh boy, this be fun.
I love the FPGA vs SOC analogy.
It is very interesting how AI is changing the way we find information and work around the world so exponentially. Investing in large companies dedicated to AI is a smart move. Many companies, are and will continue to migrate to this new technology, it saves money if a robot can do a job instead of a person.
Love thisssss!!!
The tarpit idea concept is pretty interesting takeaway.
As a german startup founder I directly recognized this intro jingle 😅 - shout out to all OMR education listener ✌❤
Great content that just answer my question!
3:55 - I don't believe in coincidences. I decided to finally go back to college & earn a CS degree I started years prior. And about 3 months before graduating, an old friend asked me to partner with him on an AI startup. So I'm grateful to say not only am I getting in on this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity, but doing it with a fresh current Computer Science education. Granted the timing worked out for me, but I do believe there is more benefit to earning that degree while still jumping into this world. Great video, thanks!!
Best 32 minutes i attended in a while.
Noting a namespace collision: Lightcone Infrastucture (often just called Lightcone) is the parent organization of LessWrong.
3 ай бұрын
Many such cases
@michaelnurse9089
3 ай бұрын
Its not a legal problem so I say go ahead.
First, great show. I appreciate getting into the nuts-n-bolts, but also appreciate higher level talk shows like this. Thank you. Secondly, what is the name of the Government contracting AI company/tool that you mentioned? I almost fell off my seat when I heard someone was doing this. I started this very same thing, however, it's a 50/50 split of code and AI, as I've found at least 50% of a Sources Sought response or Market Survey response is a regurgitation of what can be found through code. In any case, if I can pay for an already operational SaaS for this, I would gladly do that in place on finishing what I've been working on.
This is incredible. Everyone of you looks and sounds great too.
AI is changing the way we access information and the way we work. Even just investing in the major public players is a great way to get exposure to AI. It simply makes sense economically if you can have a robot do what you need to pay a human to do.
@carultch
Ай бұрын
Who's gonna buy all the junk that robots are making, when the average person can no longer afford to pay for their housing and food?
If models become local (stored and processed on prem for mobile and desktop) Then applications serve as a literal UI layer. Apps become more lightweight going forward?
I’m a GPT-4 customer. I’m frustrated with the overconfidence in responses that end up being wrong. I’m also frustrated with its laziness and not knowing where the laziness starts and ends. I asked it to give me a list of all the countries in the world and it was adamant that I just go to a Wikipedia page.
Thank you
Gary Tan is such a great listener
2 Things I've advised our clients to consider with AI: > Focus on the picks and shovels: Enable AI rather than create it. > Double click on a niche: Don't just focus on an industry but a niche within a single industry. e.g. Not just antiques but antique books.
@BlueRockYT
2 ай бұрын
About the first, I think a lot of clients want all-in-one observability platforms that typically just get built by the biggest players (e.g. Azure), it seems like niche ideas may win in that field as well
Such an underwhelming explanation of the lightcone. It’s the space-time region that any physical entity can be causally connected to! Such a cool podcast title!
Note for myself: Popular ideas for AI startups that are not working(tarpit ideas) AI copilot: Build a copilot for someone's product or service. Finetuning open-source models. Ideas working: LLM security.
@Brodragon2225
3 ай бұрын
I think you are right it's crowded place there is more ai startups than demand
@ephreamjudegeorge8063
3 ай бұрын
Why does an AI copilot ain't work?
@Brodragon2225
3 ай бұрын
@@ephreamjudegeorge8063 there are many industry giants already like ibm unless you want to get f up.Better do something on other products
Thanks, Y Combinator, for the knowledge shared. I'm exploring a niche within the LLM-based AI tool space, similar to what Agent GPT offers, but more focused. Given that broader AI tools like the upcoming GPT-5 may not cater specifically to every unique problem or audience, how viable do you think a specialized, niche AI solution is? Can targeting a specific audience with tailored solutions still be a sustainable business model despite the broader capabilities of general AI platforms?
@J35Y1
2 ай бұрын
No for long term. The general use AI is growing and developing rapiy and becoming close to the solution people need
Highly informative.
Exciting start! The Lightcone Podcast's debut episode, featuring insights from YC Group Partners working with top AI startup founders, promises a treasure trove of valuable lessons.
Just curious, it's interesting how every one of you mentioned LLMs, but no one talked about CNNs (Convolutional Neural Networks). Is it because there are so few computer vision-related startups applying or generally building in this area? Great first episode, by the way. Always love your content, can't wait for future episodes - it's going to be epic!
@ycombinator
3 ай бұрын
There are just fewer focused there but they do exist Eg Standard AI or Flock Safety
@inkmanworkshop
3 ай бұрын
@@ycombinator Thanks for the clarification and quick response.
Curious how much should LLM API costs be for B2B SaaS built using LLMs - 10%?
Data privacy is the main driver for customers looking into hosting their own LLMs specially in regulated markets in the EU
Well from what I understand that AI as it stands is very difficult to implement, but even more difficult to get people to use, which is closer to my experience. The solution to this is to design an AI that the user doesn't necessarily interact with, but functions in the background (usually as an auto-complete). I think that's probably the direction to go in first, and then once we figure how to use AI as a really sophicated auto-complete, then we can properly move on to auto-gen bots that can just use the tools without supervision. Finally once it understands how to just use the tools as good as a human, then we can go into full automation, where we just give it a task, and it will complete it, as well as a human can.
A light cone in special relativity does does not refer to the spatial cone shape produced by a flashlight. Maybe im confused abt what he meant. It actually is related to the cone shape that all possible trajectories of light produce on a local spacetime diagram. For a given starting point it defines a boundary that no object can ever cross.
I am a geek and love innovations and cutting edge in AI.
@lukhanyovictor
2 ай бұрын
Can you code?
Amazing
we need less products with GPT wrappers, instead it is good to see open source AI model with training dataset, but it can contain some danger. anyway looking forward for appearing new AI driven companies observed - backed by YC ⭐
Great startup idea lying on the ground: make it easy for viewers to fix youtube transcript (so it can pass the touring test)
@carolinele4027
2 ай бұрын
lol exactly what I thought 😂
Building a startup should start from problems. Building an AI startup should start from problems, too, not AI.
for others closer to my age (mid 40s and up), I have a course on skool called prompt-engineering , I taught kindergarten 9 years then went to computer science/ data science school/ bootcamps with the kids, now 8 years in tech, working as an ai integrated specialist
@agi.kitchen
2 ай бұрын
On skool, I have a course called prompt-engineering , I do live zoom on Saturdays if people have questions. Not free but free stuff, you can find anywhere online
Still percolating on "GPT Wrappers" and subsequent discussion.
I suspect that the term 'smart founder' might scare off the young, talented but shy potential entrepreneurs. It could be a term invented by those who have already 'made it' and who have more than a touch of hubris.
00:02 AI startup ideas are everywhere. 02:10 YC funds a significant number of AI companies due to the preference for funding smart founders, not specific industries. 05:53 Finding a niche problem can lead to successful startup ideas 07:57 AI startups often get stuck in untested ideas, leading to challenges in customer adoption 11:46 AI startups face challenges with product market fit and actual use case adoption. 13:53 Demand for fine-tuned open source models driven by cost and customization needs 17:57 Customized models are winning in specific domains. 19:48 Startups in YC often pivot quickly to find a new idea 23:27 AI can transform the scope of software and reimagine existing applications with AI capabilities 25:18 AI voice agents are being used as receptionists by companies. 29:06 Returning to the roots of funding hardcore technical founders 30:54 Geeks drive tech innovation despite fluctuations
what are some good AI stuff examples done in drastically cheaper way but the conventional thought was it mi8 cost us so much?
Love it!
would be cool if someone could merge Real-Time Computer Vision and a Large Language Model to develop a real-time conversation-based AI co-worker equipped with vision. Instead of solely focusing on replacing tasks, which might not happen as quickly in some areas, perhaps someone could concentrate on enhancing productivity and aiding individuals to become more proficient in utilizing AI effectively.
For businesses, leveraging private data with approval. But consumers face leveraging (mostly public) data without approvals (ie. using copywrited data)
Wow, thanks a lot - very inspiring! Currently building a global mental healthcare ecosystem. This video gave me interesting perspectives on how to move forward.
Nice !
I like the lady's point there at 11:54: Maybe we don't need shovel, maybe we need entirely new tool. Who knows.