EP 10 - The Walk-Back: Who Actually Wins the AI Era

The AI job apocalypse was oversold — and the same people who sold it are quietly walking it back. So what's actually true? And more importantly, who wins? In episode 10, Anthony Batt and Harry DeMott cut through the hype and doom cycle to get to the sober truth: AI is a genuinely transformational technology, the fear was a fundraising strategy, and the companies that figure out the sequence — not the moonshot — are the ones that will come out ahead. Three things this episode covers: The Fear Was the GTM — OpenAI and Anthropic needed the job apocalypse narrative to raise capital, drive enterprise adoption, and lobby for regulatory capture. It worked. Now that the IPO window is opening, the walk-back has begun. Harry and Anthony break down why fear is always a better attention strategy than nuance — and why the truth about AI is actually more interesting than either the doom or the hype. Building an AI-Enabled Team Is Genuinely Hard — Most companies are stuck in "bring your own AI" mode: employees using ChatGPT on their phones with no system tying it to outcomes. The difference between using AI and running AI is a decade of deployment work. We get into why the frontier labs are standing up their own consulting arms, why the McKinsey playbook doesn't translate, and why Kirkland & Ellis betting $500M to build their own legal AI might be the smartest move in the room. The Practical Playbook — You don't need a moonshot. You need a sequence. Start small, measure what works, then systematize. Anthony and Harry make the case that private, founder-led companies have the biggest opportunity right now — agile teams with good AI tooling can now compete above their weight class against incumbents whose moats are being bridged from every direction. As Anthony puts it: "AI isn't taking the jobs. But it's quietly rewriting who gets to compete." Subscribe to the CO/AI newsletter at getcoai.com Follow: @getcoai | Anthony: @djabatt | Follow Harry: @hdemott