Sometimes I think Sequoia has passed its sell-by date, that all its glories are in the past, like the two old women in Maximov's "All in the past":
The estate of the middling gentry falling into genteel disrepair as the energy, feebly sustained by the tea in the samovar, drains from the scene. But the memories, the nights dancing with the young soldiers from St. Petersburg....
Or something.
But maybe the glory days, the investments in Yahoo and PayPal and Google and the rest, though impossible to replicate, are an inspiration and challenge for the new batch of VCs.
From StartupHub.ai, August 28:
AI’s Cognitive Revolution: A $10 Trillion Opportunity Unfolding at Unprecedented Speed
Artificial intelligence represents a transformation “as big, if not bigger, than the Industrial Revolution,” according to Konstantine Buhler of Sequoia Capital. This bold assertion, delivered in his presentation, outlines Sequoia’s investment thesis on AI, framing it not just as technological advancement, but as a cognitive revolution poised to unlock a $10 trillion opportunity in the US services market alone.
Buhler spoke on the parallels between the Industrial Revolution and the current AI era, noting a critical difference: speed. While it took 144 years from the invention of the steam engine to the factory assembly line, the cognitive revolution is compressing similar leaps—from the first GPU in 1999 to the first AI factory in 2016—into mere years. This acceleration is driven by what he terms the “specialization imperative,” where general-purpose technologies evolve into highly specialized components and labor, leading to unprecedented efficiency.
The commercial opportunity is staggering. The US services market, valued at $10 trillion, currently sees only 0.2% automated by AI. This represents a vast greenfield for innovation. Buhler draws a compelling analogy to the cloud transformation, which not only captured market share from on-premise software but expanded the overall software market from $350 billion to over $650 billion today. AI is expected to replicate, and even surpass, this expansion.
The nature of work is fundamentally shifting from “100% certainty” on task outcomes to a paradigm of “100%+ leverage” with “far less certainty on the exact manifestation of its outcome.” This means AI agents will augment human knowledge workers, allowing individuals to manage hundreds or even thousands of interactions simultaneously. The new production function, Buhler posits, is “FLOPs per knowledge worker,” indicating a future where compute consumption per individual will increase tenfold or even a thousandfold.
This shift necessitates a change in how performance is measured. Academic benchmarks are now “dead”; real-world validation is the new gold standard....
....MORE, including the video.