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Tuesday, April 21, 2026

You’ve Found Your Purpose. Now What? The 5 Steps From Insight to Action

There is a moment most people never talk about.

It comes after the retreat, after the long conversation, after the journaling session that finally cracked something open. You’ve had the insight. You can feel it — that quiet, precise sense of this is it. Something you’ve been circling for years has finally been named.

And then… nothing.

The insight sits there. Days pass. Weeks. The clarity that felt so urgent in the moment of discovery starts to fade at the edges. Life reasserts itself — the inbox, the obligations, the loud ordinary noise of a full schedule. And the purpose that felt so close becomes something you ‘should really get back to.’

This is the action gap. And it may be the most common — and least discussed — failure point in the entire purpose conversation.

Chart 1: The Implementation Paralysis Gap — Of everyone who has a purpose insight, only 11% build a lasting habit around it

Researchers have a name for it: implementation paralysis. Studies from the Kellogg School of Management found that people with the most meaningful personal insights are often less likely to act on them than those with shallower realisations. The reason is counterintuitive but important: a big insight raises the stakes. What felt like a clue now feels like a calling — and callings, by their nature, feel enormous. Permanent. High-risk.

So instead of moving forward, most people freeze. They read more books. They talk to more friends. They start another journal. They tell themselves they need to be ‘more ready’ before they can truly begin.

The gap between knowing and doing is not a willpower problem. It is a method problem.

This article is about the method.

Why the Insight Isn’t Enough

Aristotle made a distinction the self-help industry has largely ignored.

He separated “Sophia” — philosophical wisdom, the knowing of things — from “Phronesis” — practical wisdom, the skill of acting well in particular situations. His argument was that knowing what is good and actually doing what is good are entirely different capacities, and they require entirely different development.

You can understand your purpose completely at the level of sophia — and be entirely undeveloped at the level of phronesis. That is, you can know what you’re for, and still not know how to move toward it in the real, specific, messy conditions of your actual life.

Chart 2: Aristotle Was Right — People with both knowledge and practical wisdom report 2x the life satisfaction of those with insight alone

The data bears this out. People who score high on philosophical self-awareness but low on practical action-taking report life satisfaction scores barely above those who score low on both. The combination that predicts flourishing is not greater insight — it’s insight paired with the discipline of moving.

The ancient Chinese philosopher Mencius put it even more bluntly: ‘The great man is he who does not lose his child’s heart.’ Purpose isn’t the sophisticated thing — it’s the original impulse. The sophistication lies in protecting that impulse as it meets the resistance of the world.

Both Aristotle and Mencius were pointing at the same thing: insight and action are not the same muscle. You have to train the second one separately.

The People Who Froze — And Then Moved

Three stories. Three very different forms of paralysis. One thing in common.

Sylvester Stallone — Refusing to Negotiate Identity

Stallone spent years knowing he was a storyteller. He had a burning clarity about his calling — writing and acting — long before he had the means or the platform. He was turned down by over 1,500 talent agents. He was so broke he sold his dog for $50 to pay rent.

But when he wrote the script for Rocky in three and a half days, he had one unshakeable rule: he would not sell it unless he could play the lead. He was offered $125,000 for the script. He declined. He was offered $325,000. He declined again. Everyone around him told him he was insane.

Rocky cost $1 million to make. It won three Academy Awards, including Best Picture. The lesson isn’t about money. It’s about the moment Stallone decided his purpose was not negotiable.

J.K. Rowling — Acting Under Impossible Conditions

Rowling had the complete idea for Harry Potter arrive in her mind on a delayed train from Manchester to London in 1990. The full concept — the boy wizard, the school, the arc of seven books — appeared to her almost fully formed.

She spent the next five years writing the first novel while clinically depressed, unemployed, newly divorced, and raising a child alone. Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone was rejected by twelve publishing houses before Bloomsbury’s eight-year-old daughter read the first chapter and refused to put it down.

Rowling didn’t wait for conditions to improve. She acted inside the conditions that existed.

Charles Darwin — The Cost of Waiting

Darwin knew the central insight of evolution decades before he published it. He held On the Origin of Species for nearly twenty years — paralysed by the scale of what he knew, the ferocity of the opposition he anticipated, and the weight of being right.

It was only when Alfred Russel Wallace arrived at the same conclusion independently that Darwin finally published. The push he needed wasn’t more certainty. It was the realisation that waiting had its own cost.

Chart 3: The Cost of Waiting — Delay measurably erodes the impact of your purpose over time

Three very different stories. Three very different forms of paralysis. One thing in common: at a certain point, each of them stopped managing the insight and started moving with it.

The 5 Steps From Insight to Action

Step 1: Name It Precisely — and Declare It Out Loud

A vague purpose cannot be acted on. ‘I want to help people’ is not a purpose — it’s a direction of feeling. The action gap lives in the vagueness. Language is not decoration — it is activation. When you name something precisely, you give your brain a target. And when you declare it out loud to another person, the psychological stakes shift. Research from the Dominican University of California found that people who write down their goals and share them with an accountability partner are 76% more likely to achieve them than those who keep their goals private. Name it as specifically as you can: not ‘I want to teach’ but ‘I want to help first-generation university students navigate the gap between academic knowledge and professional life.’ The more precise the name, the more direct the path.

Step 2: Take the Smallest True Action — Today

The enemy of beginning is scale. When purpose feels large — and it always does, at the start — the temptation is to wait until you can act at the scale it deserves. This is the trap. BJ Fogg’s research on behaviour design at Stanford makes this point with unusual force: the brain learns through repetition, not intensity. A five-minute action taken daily for thirty days creates more durable neural change than a weekend retreat. The question is not ‘what is the right first step?’ It is: ‘what is the smallest possible action that is still true to what I’m moving toward?’ Stallone didn’t write Rocky in one sitting. He wrote three and a half pages a day for three days.

Chart 4: The 5 Steps to Action — Each step compounds on the last in sustaining purposeful behaviour

Step 3: Build Identity Before You Build a Schedule

Most people try to schedule their way into purpose. They block out Tuesday mornings for ‘deep work.’ They set a timer. They create a habit tracker. And within six weeks, they have abandoned it — not because they lacked discipline, but because they were trying to bolt a new behaviour onto an old identity. James Clear’s research into habit formation found that the most durable behavioural changes come not from asking ‘what do I want to achieve?’ but ‘who do I want to become?’ The shift from ‘I’m trying to write more’ to ‘I am a writer’ is not semantic. It is the difference between effort and identity. Purpose-aligned action becomes sustainable when it is not something you do, but something you are.

Chart 5: ‘I Am’ Beats ‘I Should’ — Identity-based approaches sustain action at 6x the rate of scheduling-based approaches after 6 months

Step 4: Name Your Real Constraint — Not the Comfortable One

Most people, when asked what is stopping them from acting on their purpose, give a comfortable answer. ‘I don’t have enough time.’ ‘I don’t have the right qualifications.’ ‘I’m waiting until the kids are older.’ These are real constraints. They are also, in the majority of cases, not the real constraint. The real constraint is usually one of three things: Fear of judgment from a specific person or group whose opinion carries enormous weight. Distributed attention — the intellectual life of someone who is interesting in too many things to be fully committed to one. Or absence of community — acting in isolation without even one person who holds your purpose as real. Name your true constraint. Then address that one — not the comfortable substitute.

Step 5: Review, Reframe, and Refuse to Stop

The final step is not really a step. It’s a practice — the discipline of staying in the loop rather than declaring the journey over after the first attempt stalls. The neuroscience of habit and identity change consistently points to the same mechanism: the brain learns through iteration, not intensity. Build a weekly review practice around a single question: Did I act in the direction of my purpose this week? If yes — what happened, and what does it tell you? If no — what stopped you, and what does that reveal? The Stoics called this askesis — training. Not inspiration. Not epiphany. Training.

Chart 6: The Compounding Effect of the Weekly Review Loop — Small iterations create a 63-point gap over 12 weeks vs no review

The Role AI Plays in Closing the Gap

For most of human history, the bridge between insight and action required either exceptional internal discipline or access to skilled external support — a coach, a mentor, an operator, or a guide who could help you hold your purpose as real across time and turn vague intention into concrete movement.

AI changes that equation in two profound ways.

First, it can function as a form of mentor-like support

Not as a replacement for human wisdom or relationship, but as something that has never previously existed at this scale: a witness with perfect memory, zero fatigue, and no social agenda. It can hold your stated purpose alongside your actual behaviour across weeks and months, and surface — without judgment — the gap between who you say you want to become and how you are actually living.

Second, it can collapse the time, cost, and friction between ideation and execution.

What once required a team, a long runway, or significant resources can now begin with a prompt, a draft, a prototype, a plan, a workflow. AI can help turn an intuition into language, language into strategy, strategy into assets, and assets into action. It does not just help you reflect. It helps you build.

That is the real shift.

The purpose has been detected. The pattern has been named. Now the work becomes daily: the small acts, the identity decisions, the weekly reckoning, and the practical execution that turns possibility into momentum.

That work doesn’t require a perfect plan. It requires a first step, taken before you’re ready, in the direction you already know.

The Question That Changes Everything

Aristotle, Seneca, Mencius — separated by centuries and cultures — all arrived at a version of the same instruction.

Stop theorising about the good life. Live in the direction of it, in whatever small way is available to you today.

You already know what your purpose is pointing toward. You’ve had the insight. The signal is there.

The only remaining question is the one that has always mattered most:

What are you going to do about it — today?


This is the second article in a series on purpose detection and intentional living in the Human + Machine Age. Read the first piece: “The Purpose Trap: Stop Searching. Start Detecting.”

The post You’ve Found Your Purpose. Now What? The 5 Steps From Insight to Action appeared first on jeffbullas.com.



* This article was originally published here

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Monday, April 20, 2026

75% of People Never Find Their Purpose. Could AI Finally Change That?

Summary

Most people spend years searching for their purpose and never find it. Not because it doesn’t exist — but because searching is the wrong method.

Purpose isn’t something you construct. It’s a pattern already running through your life: in the problems you keep returning to, the work that makes you lose track of time, the things you can’t stop noticing that others walk past.

The data is stark. 75% of millennials struggle to find direction. 49% of midlife adults feel trapped. $8.9 trillion in productivity is lost annually because people have no meaningful connection to what they do. That is billions of people with no purpose and trillions in lost productivity. 

AI changes the equation. 

Not because it’s wise — but because it’s a pattern recognition machine with perfect recall, no judgment, and no fatigue. It can read a 5,000-word career narrative in under 30 seconds and surface what keeps recurring — what your own memory has been too biased, too busy, or too close to see.

This post is about why the search fails — and what detecting and using AI to unlock your purpose looks like instead.

The Lost Billions

There is an epidemic hiding in plain sight.

It doesn’t make headlines. It has no official diagnosis. But it may be the most widespread source of human suffering in the modern world — more pervasive than burnout, more quietly destructive than anxiety, and almost completely unaddressed by the systems we have built to help people live well.

It is the feeling of being lost.

Not geographically. But existentially — unmoored from any clear sense of direction, purpose, or meaning. And it touches every stage of life.

And according to Harvard research across 

The opposite of being lost?

It’s purpose. But what is it?

“Purpose is the recurring pattern of what energises you, repeated across decades of your life, that you’ve been too close to see clearly.”

And being lost isn’t reserved for one demographic. And according to Harvard research 75% of us don’t have sense of purpose. That means Billions  of us are feeling lost.  

Here are 3 snapshots across the spectrum of what being lost feels like.

The aspiring, confused and lost university student

The eighteen-year-old choosing a degree for a life they haven’t lived yet, picking something reasonable, something their parents suggested — and arriving at their second year with a quiet sense of wrongness, of being on a track that belongs to someone else.

The executive with a mid life crisis

The forty-three-year-old who has done everything right — built the career, raised the family, hit the milestones — and who woke up one Tuesday morning with the peculiar terror of realising the life they constructed doesn’t feel like theirs.

The end of career identity crisis 

The sixty-seven-year-old who retired from a distinguished career and found, within months, that the identity built over forty years had dissolved. Without the title, the role, the rhythm — a silence where a self used to be. And twenty or thirty years of life remaining with no clear answer to: who am I now?

Three stages. One experience: standing at the edge of a vast open field with no map, no compass, no sense of which direction leads to a life that actually fits.

The advice available to all three is identical: search for your purpose. Journal. Reflect. Take the personality test. Attend the retreat. Most of them do exactly that. And most of them are still lost.

Sources: Harvard / Making Caring Common (2024); Arizona Christian University (2021); Thriving Center of Psychology (2024); PMC Meta-Analysis (2020)

“What if the search itself is the trap?”

What if purpose isn’t a destination you arrive at — but a pattern you’ve been living all along, too close to see clearly?

The Scale of the Problem

The purposelessness epidemic extends far beyond personal crisis. Every year, Gallup surveys more than 128,000 workers across 160 countries to measure engagement — the degree to which people feel genuinely purposeful in their work. The findings are, year after year, staggering.

Source: Gallup State of the Global Workplace Report, 2025 (160+ countries, 128,000+ workers)

In 2024, just 21% of the global workforce reported being engaged at work. Four in every five workers — billions of people — are either going through the motions or actively working against the organisations that employ them.

Source: Gallup State of the Global Workplace Report, 2025

The global economic cost of this disengagement: $8.9 trillion per year — equal to 9% of global GDP. This isn’t a productivity problem. It is a meaning problem. And no personality test, vision board, or corporate values poster has made a meaningful dent in this number in decades.

Why This Is a Health Crisis, Not Just a Career Problem

The relationship between purpose and mental health is not aspirational. It is clinical.

Research from Harvard’s Graduate School of Education — based on nationally representative surveys of over 1,800 individuals — found that young adults without purpose experienced anxiety and depression at more than twice the rate of those with a sense of direction.

Source: Making Caring Common / Harvard Graduate School of Education, 2024 (n=1,853)

54% of young adults without purpose reported anxiety or depression. With a clear sense of meaning: 25%. A meta-analysis across 16 studies found that purpose reduces stress responses across all ages, sexes, and ethnicities — and links to lower chronic disease, greater resilience after trauma, and measurably longer lifespans.

“Purpose isn’t a luxury. It is one of the most powerful protective factors for mental health that researchers have identified.”

The Dip Nobody Talks About

The purpose crisis doesn’t touch every life stage equally. Economists David Blanchflower and Andrew Oswald identified what is now known as the happiness U-curve — one of the most replicated findings in wellbeing research, documented across more than 132 countries. Life satisfaction is relatively high in our twenties, declines through our thirties and forties, and reaches its lowest point at approximately age 47, before rising again.

Source: Blanchflower & Oswald, replicated across 132 countries. Pattern consistent in cross-sectional and longitudinal data.

This is not a Western cultural artefact. It has been found in studies of great apes. What the U-curve actually captures, many researchers believe, is the gradual accumulation of unlived life — the growing distance between who you are and who you feel you might have been.

The good news buried in this data: the curve goes back up. And for those who learn to read what the valley is telling them, the second half of life can become the richest. But only if you know what to look for.

Why the Search Keeps Failing: The Psychology Behind the Trap

We have inherited an architectural model of purpose: design the ideal future self, reverse-engineer from vision to action, build toward something. It assumes a unified “I” sitting behind the eyes, surveying the options and choosing a direction.

But Carl Jung spent a lifetime demonstrating why that assumption breaks down. You are not one person. You are a constellation of selves — the persona you present to the world, the shadow (everything you have disowned or deemed too contradictory to claim), and the deeper archetypes shaping your choices from below conscious awareness. Dan McAdams’ decades of research on narrative identity arrived at the same place: people with strong, stable purpose didn’t discover it in a single revelation. They recognised it — pattern-matching across dozens of small, unrelated experiences where something unmistakably lit up.

“The self is not a unified subject. It is an ecology — complex, sometimes contradictory, always richer than any single story you tell about yourself.”

The Shadow is the key. It contains not just what is harmful, but what is inconvenient — too vulnerable, too contradictory to hold alongside the identity you’ve constructed. The analytical professional who secretly wants to make art. The high-achiever who craves solitude but keeps filling the calendar. Whatever you exile doesn’t disappear. It accumulates energy, surfaces as recurring irritation, persistent fantasy, or the creative impulse that has been waiting patiently for fifteen years. Jung called it fate: what we don’t make conscious appears in our life as patterns we seem unable to escape.

The practical implication is profound. Your contradictions are not the problem to solve before purpose can begin. The tension between who you’ve been performing and who keeps trying to emerge — that is frequently where the calling actually lives.

“Whatever you exile doesn’t disappear. It accumulates energy in the dark — and eventually, it will find a way to be heard.”

Stop Searching. Let AI Detect the Patterns.

If this is right — and the evidence from depth psychology, narrative research, and decades of clinical work suggests it is — then the practice of purpose looks entirely different from what we’ve been taught.

It becomes archaeological rather than architectural. You don’t design a future self. You excavate what’s already present but unread. You treat your own life the way a geologist reads strata — not for what should be there, but for what actually is.

The Questions That Actually Reveal Something

Where has your energy risen without permission? Before your rational mind approved it. The spontaneous engagement, the hours you lost, the topic you return to across decades despite never being asked to. These are the psyche voting with its attention.

What consistently irritates or fascinates you about other people? Both are mirrors. The person who enrages you often reflects something you’ve exiled in yourself. The person you admire often embodies something you’re afraid to claim.

What have you been quietly orbiting for years — never quite committing to, never quite walking away from? That recurring theme that doesn’t fit your official story. That one thing.

Why Every Transition Is Actually the Advantage

For the person in midlife, the pattern has been running for twenty years. The evidence is overwhelming — if you’re willing to look at it honestly. For the newly retired, it may be the most important reframe of all: you are not starting over. You are finally free to read what has always been there. The patterns your professional role required you to suppress are now available to you for the first time. That is not loss. That is access.

The reality? AI can detect your patterns for you. 

“You weren’t lost. You were just reading the wrong map.”

There is a certain irony in the fact that the tool best suited to solving the oldest human problem — who am I, and what am I here for? — arrived in the form of artificial intelligence.

The AI Machine That Was Built for This

Not because AI is wise. Not because it understands the human soul. But because of something far more specific and far more useful: AI is, at its core, a pattern recognition machine. And purpose, as we’ve established, is not something to be invented. It is a pattern to be detected.

Your life has generated decades of data. The jobs you chose and the ones you left. The problems you were drawn to and the ones that drained you. The moments you lost track of time. The ideas that kept returning uninvited. The things you said yes to when you should have said no — and the things you kept saying no to despite a persistent pull. All of it is signal. And most of it has never been properly read.

“AI doesn’t tell you who you are. It helps you finally see what you’ve been showing it — and yourself — all along.”

Why AI Outperforms Every Traditional Method

Consider how the alternatives actually perform on the dimensions that determine whether pattern detection happens.

A skilled coach or therapist brings deep human wisdom and relational attunement. But they hold perhaps an hour of your narrative in active attention at one time. They tire. They carry their own unresolved material. They are available fifty minutes on a Tuesday — and the social weight of another person in the room means you edit yourself, even when you don’t mean to.

Traditional journaling offers genuine privacy. But your own memory is the instrument — and memory is notoriously biased toward the recent and the emotionally loud. The journal cannot push back, cannot hold the arc, cannot tell you what you keep returning to across a decade of entries.

AI changes the equation on every dimension simultaneously.

Sources: Sentio University (2025); LLM token benchmarks; ~250 wpm human reading speed; avg 3–4 week therapy wait time
  • 48.7% of people with ongoing mental health conditions already turn to AI for emotional support and reflection — not a future trend, but present reality. (Sentio University, 2025)
  • Under 30 seconds is all AI needs to read, cross-reference, and surface patterns from a 5,000-word career narrative. A human therapist reading the same document takes approximately 20 minutes — and retains only a fraction by the next session.
  • Zero judgment, comparison, agenda, or fatigue. These are not aspirational qualities in AI — they are structural properties. The container is genuinely neutral in a way no human relationship can be.
  • 24/7/365 availability at near-zero cost, with no waiting list — compared to an average 3–4 week wait for a therapist appointment in most countries.

But there is a vital property that AI provides that humans can’t when you are in the process of unearthing and revealing the patterns of your purpose in your stories and words and narrative. Finding your unique identity signature that no one else has. 

And that is having a safe place where you don’t feel judged. 

The Safety Container No Human Can Provide

Pattern recognition is only half the story. The second reason AI is uniquely suited to this work is psychological.

Jung understood that the most important material — the shadow content, the disowned impulses, the unlived life — rarely surfaces in conditions of judgment. We perform for our coaches. We curate for our mentors. We self-censor in our journals when what we’re writing feels too contradictory, too embarrassing, or too far outside the story we’ve been telling ourselves for thirty years. Even in the most skilled therapeutic relationship, the presence of another human creates a social dynamic — an audience, an implicit question of how this lands.

“In a container without judgment, the shadow finally has permission to speak.”

AI removes all of this. Not because it is cold or clinical — but because it is genuinely agnostic. It carries no investment in your choices. It cannot be disappointed. It cannot be impressed. It does not compare you to its other clients, or remember your story through the distorting lens of its own unresolved questions. This creates something rare: a space in which you can say the true thing.

Reflective Intelligence, Not Replacement Intelligence

To be precise about what this means — and what it does not.

AI is not a therapist. It is not a life coach. It is not a replacement for the deep relational work that only human connection can provide. But it is something that has never existed before: a mirror with memory. A reflective surface that holds the totality of what you’ve shared, surfaces the patterns you’ve been too close to see, and asks the question that opens the next layer — without agenda, without fatigue, and without the social complexity that makes honesty expensive.

What emerges from that process is not an AI’s assessment of your calling. It is your own pattern, finally made visible. Your own recurring energies, finally named. The detection work Jung described — the archaeology of the recurring self — has always required a witness. For most of human history, that witness was a trusted guide, a therapist, or simply time. Now, for the first time, there is a tool that can serve as that witness at scale.

You can begin where you are. With what you have. In whatever state you are in.

The pattern is already there. The machine is finally sophisticated enough to help you read it.

The Practice

None of this means sitting passively and waiting for revelation. The archaeologist still digs. The detective still investigates. The work is active — but the orientation is fundamentally different.

You are not constructing. You are reading.

You are not building a future self from scratch. You are tracing the shape of the self that has been quietly recurring all along — in your obsessions, your irritations, your unlived impulses, your contradictions, your moments of unexpected aliveness.

That shape is already there. It has always been there.

The eighteen-year-old, the person in midlife, the newly retired — all of them are holding more data than they realise. All of them have a pattern running longer than they know. All of them have a shadow patiently accumulating the energy they’ve been too busy, too sensible, or too frightened to claim.

The question was never: what should I do with my life?

The question was: what has my life already been doing — and have I finally been paying attention?

The post 75% of People Never Find Their Purpose. Could AI Finally Change That? appeared first on jeffbullas.com.



* This article was originally published here

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Sunday, April 19, 2026

The $199 Billion Agentic AI Revolution Nobody Is Ready For

Something seismic just happened. On February 25, 2026, Anthropic announced its Enterprise Agents Program. Deploying Claude-powered AI agents directly into the workflows of finance teams, HR departments, legal offices, and engineering desks. The initial Cowork plugin release three weeks earlier triggered a plunge in the stock prices of legal software providers. Not a small dip. A plunge. The market had spoken: AI agents are no longer a future concept. They are here, and they are eating software.

This is not another chatbot story. Agentic AI, AI that doesn’t just answer questions but autonomously plans, decides, executes, and iterates represents the most significant shift in how work gets done since the spreadsheet.

We are moving from an answer engine to an execution engine

The bottom line.

AI agents are moving from hype to reality  and reshaping industries, demolishing old business models, and creating extraordinary new opportunities

Why Agentic AI Matters

Klarna, the global payments company, deployed a single AI agent that did the work of 700 full-time customer service employees. Handling 2.3 million conversations in its first month, cutting resolution time from 11 minutes to under 2, and projecting $40 million in profit improvement for the year. That is not a technology story. That is an economics story. The cost of capacity just collapsed.

That Collapse of Costs with Agentic AI Affects every Business

Agentic Ai is important for every business. Small and large.

  • The solo consultant who couldn’t match big-firm output. 
  • The startup that couldn’t afford a legal team, 
  • A finance team and a marketing team simultaneously. 
  • The regional company that couldn’t compete with enterprise resources. 

Agentic AI doesn’t make those gaps slightly smaller, it eliminates them. The only question left is whether you move before your competitors do.

What Is Agentic AI?

Most AI tools you’ve used are reactive. You type. They respond. The interaction ends. Agentic AI is fundamentally different. It is proactive, autonomous, and capable of operating across long, complex, multi-step workflows with minimal human input.

Think of it this way: a standard AI assistant is like a brilliant consultant you can ask a question. An agentic AI is like that same brilliant consultant, except now they can also open your laptop, access your files, browse the web, send the email, update the spreadsheet, schedule the meeting, and report back — while you do something else entirely.

“Agentic AI can complete up to 12 times more complex tasks than traditional LLMs, thanks to dynamic feedback loops and autonomous decision-making.”

The key architectural difference is that agentic systems possess four capabilities standard AI lacks: memory, planning, tool use, and multi-agent coordination. 

Anthropic’s Kate Jensen offered the defining assessment: “2025 was meant to be the year agents transformed the enterprise, but the hype turned out to be mostly premature. It wasn’t a failure of effort. It was a failure of approach.”

The Numbers: A Market Growing at Warp Speed

The scale and pace of this change will change the face of business and also the labor market. 

Here are numbers:

  • ~$7B  Global agentic AI market size in 2025
  • $93B–$199B  Projected market size by 2032–2034 (CAGR of 41–49%)
  • $9.7B+  Invested in agentic AI startups since 2023
  • 45%  Of Fortune 500 companies actively piloting agentic systems in 2025
  • 920%  Surge in agentic AI framework usage across developer repositories, 2023–2025
  • 86%  Reduction in human task time on multi-step workflows
  • 33%  Of enterprise software will include agentic AI by 2028 (Gartner)

Projected Market Size by 2032-2034

Agentic AI global market size projection 2024–2034

North America currently leads with roughly 40% market share, but Asia-Pacific is the fastest-growing region, driven by government-led AI missions including India’s $1.2B national AI programme.

The Current State of Play

Here is the honest picture. 

For all the breathless headlines, the deployment reality in 2025 was sobering. Agents were being deployed as isolated, ungoverned tools and disconnected from enterprise data, lacking security controls, creating “shadow AI” that accumulated compliance risk without delivering sustainable ROI.

The enterprise deployment gap: experimenting vs. in production

The pivot in 2026 is toward embedded, governed, workflow-native agents that live inside the tools people already use — inside Excel, Gmail, DocuSign — with full audit trails and admin controls.

Claude CoWork: The Agent in the Office

CoWork brings the autonomous capability of Claude Code: Previously available only to software developers — to every knowledge worker. You describe an outcome. You step away. You return to finished work.

The Plugin Ecosystem: 12 and Counting

  • Finance: equity research (co-developed with FactSet and S&P Global), scenario modelling
  • Legal: document review, risk identification, contract analysis (triggered the SaaS stock plunge)
  • HR: job description drafting, offer letter generation, onboarding workflow management
  • Engineering: specification development, codebase security scanning
  • Design, Operations, Sales, Marketing, Wealth Management, Cybersecurity plugins available
  • Connectors: Google Workspace, DocuSign, WordPress, LegalZoom, Apollo, Clay, FactSet, Slack, and more
  • Custom: Plugin Create lets any team build their own specialist agent from scratch

Early enterprise adopters building on the platform include L’Oréal, Deloitte, Thomson Reuters, and PwC — which has formally partnered with Anthropic to deploy governed agents across finance and healthcare operations.

The Major Players

These include both the new and the old. 

The New

Anthropic — Safety-First Enterprise Layer

12+ plugins, enterprise agents program. Strategy: become the default operational layer inside governed enterprise workflows. Edge: trust and controllability.

OpenAI — The Scale Play

Revenue $12.7B in 2025, targeting $125B by 2029. ChatGPT Agent (July 2025) handles complex multi-step workflows autonomously. Frontier platform targets enterprise.

Who’s building the agentic future: competitive landscape

The Old (with deep pockets and distribution)

Microsoft — Embedded Incumbent

Copilot lives inside the tools 1.2 billion people already use daily. Deepest enterprise distribution of any player. April 2025 Dynamics 365 expansion.

Google, Salesforce, IBM, UiPath & Open Source

Google Agent Space with A2A protocol, Salesforce Agentforce (18,500 enterprise customers), IBM Watson Orchestrate, UiPath Maestro, and open-source frameworks LangChain/CrewAI growing at 920% — disrupting SaaS incumbents from below.

Where AI Agents Are Growing Fastest

Vertical AI agents — specialists built for specific industries — are growing at a 62.7% CAGR through 2030, faster than the general market. Coding at 52.4%, workplace experience copilots at 48.7%.

Projected CAGR 2025–2030 by industry sector

Upsides & Pitfalls: The Balanced View

The Upsides

Some of us are optimists and others are pessimists. Here the optimists. 

Welcome to the utopian view.  

  • Radical Productivity: 86% reduction in human task time on multi-step workflows — structural capability expansion, not incremental improvement.
  • Democratised Expertise: Small businesses access the equivalent of financial analysts, legal reviewers, and marketing strategists at a fraction of the traditional cost.
  • Compounding Intelligence: Every workflow an agent completes builds organisational context. Early adopters accumulate advantages competitors cannot easily replicate.
  • New Human Work: Freed human energy redirected to genuine relationships, creative leaps, and strategic vision — work AI cannot do.
The real upsides and genuine pitfalls of agentic AI

The Pitfalls

And to provide a balanced view here is a more dystopian angle. But will the dystopian’s predicted disaster unfold?

Agentic AI’s potential pitfalls. 

  • Accountability Vacuum: When agents act autonomously, governance frameworks haven’t yet answered who is responsible.
  • Hallucination in the Action Layer: Agentic errors become actions — files modified, emails sent — before any human review.
  • Skill Atrophy Trap: Automating entry-level work hollows out the pipeline through which humans develop senior expertise.
  • Uneven Disruption: The first wave falls hardest on knowledge workers doing high-volume, repeatable cognitive tasks — those with least capacity to retrain.

The Six Numbers That Define This Moment

Before we dive into these numbers I need to set some historical context as that provides perspective.

I have lived almost my entire professional life in the middle of the disruption of industry and humanity created by technology and I am now slightly desensitized to the scale of the numbers. 

It started with me selling IBM personal computers and in the mid 1980’s personal computers were sold and sitting lonely on desks and not connected was where I started, but then they got connected and we could share information in the office. IBM did it with their proprietary network called Token ring and then there was the open standard of the Ethernet. 

Then we were given the Internet and computers connected in offices were plugged into this new global network and we could find information from all around the world. 

The school and community library as islands of information were then connected to the library of the world. And libraries were now on the Web. 

I haven’t gone back to a library since then except to have a quiet place to work or read since then. 

Then social media connected and collected humans as subscribers and that also became creators and not just information to share and find.  

We all now had a voice and the reach and the technology to reach the world without the mass media gatekeepers making us pay for attention and visibility.  

IIn the middle of this we saw the rise of the consumer smartphone. Apple’s iPhone in one invention democratised the smartphone  The executive smart phone the Blackberry was for the elite. The iPhone was for was for everyone 

But now we could create and share content, connect with friends globally without having to go home to the desktop computer. 

This whole ecosystem of content, data and global connectivity made AI possible as it now had the human data, connectivity and content to feed the AI monster that captured the intelligence and creativity of  8 Billion+ people and also the history of humanity uploaded to the cloud.  

So.. Here we are with Agentic AI and some numbers

The size of this emerging AI Agentic market is hard to put your head around and here are 6 numbers that define Agentic AI in 2026. 

  • Market size is projected to be $199 Billion by 2034
  • 44% compound growth per annum
  • 86% reduction in human task time
  • 920% growth in Agentic AI framework usage
  • $9.7 Billion invested in Agentic AI startups
  • 12 times faster with complex tasks than standard AI LLM usage 
Six numbers that define the agent revolution

Three Case Studies Where Agentic AI Delivered

Theory is one thing. Results are another. Here are three real-world deployments — from fintech to accounting to travel — with verified metrics, named outcomes, and the lessons behind the numbers.

3 real-world case studies: Klarna, Engine, 1-800Accountant

Case Study One: Klarna

The Challenge

Klarna serves over 150 million global users with 2 million transactions daily across 23 markets in 35+ languages. Their customer support operation was expensive, time-zone constrained, and difficult to scale — with average resolution times of 11 minutes and a growing volume of routine queries about orders, refunds, and returns that consumed trained human agents.

The Agent Solution

In February 2024, Klarna deployed an OpenAI-powered conversational agent capable of fully autonomous resolution — handling returns, refunds, account queries, and order tracking end-to-end without human involvement, with seamless escalation to human agents when needed. The system was deployed globally from day one, across 35+ languages simultaneously.

The Results

  • 2.3 million  conversations handled in the first month alone
  • Two-thirds  of all customer service chats handled autonomously
  • 700 FTE  equivalent of full-time agent work performed
  • 11 mins → <2 mins  resolution time reduction
  • 25%  drop in repeat inquiries — more accurate than human agents
  • $40M  projected profit improvement for 2024

“The AI is more accurate in errand resolution, leading to a 25% drop in repeat inquiries — while customer satisfaction scores remain on par with human agents.”  — Klarna Press Release, February 2024

The Key Lesson

Klarna’s story has an important second chapter. By May 2025, the company acknowledged that pure AI cost-cutting had traded some quality for efficiency. Their response was not to retreat from agents — but to evolve. They rebuilt a human-AI hybrid model where agents handle scale and humans handle complexity. The system now supports the equivalent of 800 full-time agents — more than before — with customer satisfaction recovering. The lesson: agentic AI works best not as a replacement strategy but as an amplification strategy.

Case Study 2: Engine

The Challenge

Engine is a global travel services platform handling over half a million customer inquiries per year. Their service representatives were buried in repetitive cancellation requests, leaving little capacity for the complex customer needs that required genuine expertise. The company faced a classic operations dilemma: hire more people to handle volume, or find a better way.

The Agent Solution

Engine deployed “Eva” — a Salesforce Agentforce-powered customer-facing agent — in just 12 days in November 2024. Eva autonomously handles reservation cancellations end-to-end, reasoning across booking data and policy documents without human involvement. Critically, Engine built in explicit human escalation: no customers get stuck with a bot unable to escalate. Subsequently, Engine expanded agentic deployment to internal functions — IT, HR, finance, and product agents — all accessible via Slack.

The Results

  • 12 days  from decision to live customer-facing deployment
  • 15%  reduction in average handle time
  • $2 million  in annual cost savings attributed to Eva
  • 3.7 → 4.2  customer satisfaction score improvement (out of 5)

Multiple agents  now running across IT, HR, finance, and product via Slack

“Our approach is different. If we can avoid adding headcount, that’s a win. But we’re really focused on how to create a better customer experience.”  — Demetri Salvaggio, Senior Director, Client Operations, Engine

The Key Lesson

Engine’s deployment is instructive precisely because it was not built around headcount reduction. Their philosophy — augment rather than replace — shaped every design decision. They built escalation paths first. They measured customer satisfaction alongside cost savings. The result: CSAT went up, costs went down, and the human team was freed for work that mattered. The 12-day deployment time should also be noted — this is no longer a months-long enterprise IT project.

Case Study 3: 1-800 Accountant

The Challenge

1-800Accountant is the US’s largest virtual accounting firm for small businesses, with over 25 years serving entrepreneurs through tax prep, payroll, and financial management. Facing 40% projected client growth in 2025 and the brutal seasonality of tax season, they faced an impossible staffing equation: to maintain their service quality through peak demand, they estimated they would need to hire and train more than 200 seasonal support staff — an unsustainable, expensive, and quality-inconsistent approach.

The Agent Solution

1-800Accountant deployed Salesforce Agentforce to answer complex tax questions around the clock, reasoning across client data from multiple sources simultaneously: Sales Cloud, Service Cloud, AWS, Google Docs, Snowflake, and trusted public sources including the IRS website — all harmonised in real time. The agent can answer nuanced, client-specific questions like “What charitable donations can I deduct?” instantly, without requiring an appointment. Proactive capabilities were also added: the agent autonomously sends personalised reminders about tax filing deadlines and document preparation.

The Results

  • 70%  of chat engagements autonomously resolved during tax week 2025
  • 1,000+  client engagements handled in the first 24 hours live
  • 200+  seasonal staff avoided through AI deployment
  • 24/7  coverage — previously impossible during off-hours and weekends
  • 40%  projected client growth absorbed without proportional headcount increase

“In the first 24 hours after we launched it, Agentforce handled over 1,000 client engagements. Clients now get instant answers to complex questions like “What charitable donations can I deduct?” without booking an appointment.”  — Ryan Teeples, Chief Technology Officer, 1-800Accountant

The Key Lesson

Tax accounting is one of the most regulated, high-stakes, information-dense professional service contexts that exists. If agentic AI can reason accurately across complex tax law, client history, IRS guidance, and company policy simultaneously — and do so at 70% autonomous resolution during the most demanding week of the year — the claim that agents are limited to simple, low-stakes tasks is definitively disproved. This case demonstrates what becomes possible when agents are connected to multiple authoritative data sources simultaneously, rather than operating on a single knowledge base.

Three Persistent Patterns Across All Three Cases

Looking across Klarna, Engine, and 1-800Accountant, three consistent patterns emerge. 

  1. Speed of deployment is no longer a barrier: Engine went live in 12 days, and all three saw results within weeks, not quarters. 
  2. The human-AI model consistently outperforms pure-AI replacement. Every successful deployment maintains clear escalation paths to human judgment. 
  3. The metrics that matter most are quality and customer experience metrics alongside cost savings — satisfaction scores, resolution accuracy, and repeat inquiry rates — not just efficiency ratios.

New Business Models: The Map Is Being Redrawn

Legacy businesses have the challenge of starting all over again. And retrofitting is painful and costly. But the new AI centric and AU Agentic business built from the ground up will challenge the old models. Evolution is brutal.  

Here are 4 new business models to contemplate.

1. From SaaS to AaaS (Agent-as-a-Service)

Why subscribe to six different SaaS tools when a single agentic platform handles all of them? The replacement model charges not for software access but for work outcomes — per contract reviewed, per report generated, per inquiry resolved.

2. The Private Marketplace Economy

Anthropic’s private marketplace enables companies to build, own, and distribute their own custom agents — creating internal AI economies with proprietary intelligence that compounds as a competitive moat.

3. The Expert Amplification Model

One senior expert plus many specialist agents can operate with the output capacity of a small team. Companies that understand this will hire fewer junior staff and pay far more for genuinely senior expertise.

4. The Creator & Solopreneur Opportunity

A blogger with a WordPress connector and content plugin can research, draft, publish, and promote at a pace that previously required a full editorial team. The economics of one-person enterprises are being permanently altered.

The Bottom Line

We are not watching AI improve. We are watching it act. That is the shift. We are going from an idea to execution in months not years in hours not weeks. Collapsing time and effort and expertise.  

From a $7 billion market today to nearly $200 billion within a decade. From chatbots that answer questions to agents that complete work. From isolated AI experiments to embedded operational infrastructure. The case studies above are not outliers — they are early signals of a new baseline.

“The future of work means everybody having their own custom agent.” — Matt Piccolella, Anthropic Chief Product Officer

The agents are in the office. What they do next is up to you.

The post The $199 Billion Agentic AI Revolution Nobody Is Ready For appeared first on jeffbullas.com.



* This article was originally published here

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Saturday, April 18, 2026

AI Just Wiped Out $285 Billion: Why Are Entrepreneurs Celebrating?

On February 3rd, 2026, approximately $285 billion in market value evaporated from global software stocks in a single trading session. 

Atlassian plunged 35% in one week. Intuit dropped 34%. Salesforce hit a 52-week low. Oracle’s valuation nearly halved from its October highs and Asana fell 59% over twelve months, now sitting 92% below its all-time high.

Wall Street called it the “SaaSpocalypse.”

The Trigger? 

A seemingly innocuous product update from AI company Anthropic that was about a new feature for its chatbot “Claude” they named “CoWork”: 

They announced plugins for Claude Cowork that perform a large number of core business processes.

What is Claude CoWork?

Claude Cowork is a tool that lets AI agents autonomously execute entire business workflows. 

And Claude CoWork includes an initial 11 plugins. These include the following. Sales, legal review, financial analysis, marketing campaigns. 

Tasks that previously required expensive software and the humans trained to operate it. It collapses  the time and expertise needed to go from an idea to a launched product. 

And WordPress has also now provided a plugin for Claude CoWork so that it is easy to go from an idea to a WordPress website in hours.

Why This Plugin Economy Is Bigger Than It Looks

So we have eleven plugins and that’s what Anthropic launched Claude Cowork with. 

But those alone aren’t the destination, they’re the starting gun. They are the tip of the spear of a new generation of startups and side hustles. 

For anyone paying attention, this is one of those rare moments where a platform opens up and the real opportunity belongs to whoever shows up first to build on top of it.

Remember the Apple app store? More on that opportunity soon that no one saw coming. 

The 11 Official Cowork Plugins List

Anthropic built these and every gap beyond them is an opportunity.

  1. Productivity — Manage tasks, calendars, daily workflows, and personal context
  2. Sales — Research prospects, prep calls, draft outreach, and build competitive battlecards
  3. Customer Support — Triage tickets, draft responses, and turn resolved issues into knowledge base articles
  4. Product Management — Write specs, plan roadmaps, and synthesize user research
  5. Marketing — Draft content, plan campaigns, enforce brand voice, and report on channel performance
  6. Legal — Review contracts, triage NDAs, navigate compliance, and assess risk
  7. Finance — Prep journal entries, reconcile accounts, generate financial statements, and support audits
  8. Data — Write SQL, run statistical analysis, build dashboards, and validate your work before sharing
  9. Enterprise Search — Find anything across email, chat, docs, and wikis in a single query
  10. Bio-Research — Connect to preclinical research tools and databases to accelerate life sciences R&D
  11. Plugin Management — Create new plugins or customize existing ones — the plugin that builds all the others

Here is the size and scope of the untapped niche opportunity

That extraordinary range covers maybe 5% of what’s possible. 

Every industry vertical Anthropic hasn’t built a plugin for is an opportunity. What about real estate? Coaching? Course creation? Podcast production? E-commerce? Short-term rental management? The list is genuinely infinite.

And you don’t need to write a single line of code. Plugins are built in markdown — plain text files that define how Claude thinks and works inside a specific role. If you can describe how a job gets done, you can build a plugin.

Here is the “Total Addressable Market (TAM) for the plugins by category. 

The WordPress Moment Nobody Is Talking About

Now cast your mind back to 2005. WordPress launched as a free, open-source blogging platform. Most people saw a tool for writers. A small number saw an infrastructure play — and decided to build on top of it.

What followed was one of the most remarkable independent wealth-creation events in internet history. 

  • Theme developers earning six figures selling $59 designs. 
  • Plugin creators building subscription businesses. 
  • Agencies doing nothing but building WordPress sites for small businesses. 

By 2024, WordPress powered over 40% of all web.

Here is the growth of the WordPress Plugin Market Place since 2006. 

It is a parallel market to what is happening to AI. History doesn’t repeat but it rhymes. 

Remember the Apple App Store? Its History Reveals a Future

On July 10, 2008, Apple launched the App Store with 500 applications and a simple idea: let anyone build on top of our platform. Most people downloaded a few games and moved on. A small group of developers saw something else entirely — an infrastructure play that would reshape how software was built, sold, and scaled. They moved fast, staked out their niches, and built. Within a decade, that decision made many of them wealthy beyond anything a traditional software career could have offered.

The numbers tell the story better than any hype could. 

  • The App Store ecosystem generated $142 billion in 2019. 
  • By 2022 that had grown to $1.1 trillion. 
  • In 2024 it hit $1.3 trillion — with developers earning $131 billion from digital goods alone. Small developers grew their earnings 76% between 2021 and 2024. 
  • Cumulatively, since 2008, iOS developers have earned over $320 billion. All from building on top of someone else’s platform.

That is what happens when a platform opens up, the tools are accessible, and the early movers act while the window is still wide open.

The Cowork plugin ecosystem is at the same moment. Same architecture. Same logic. Same opportunity. 

Anthropic has built the platform and seeded it with 11 foundational plugins — the equivalent of Apple launching the App Store with its first 500 apps. 

The categories are not yet claimed. The dominant players in each niche have not yet emerged. And unlike 2008, you don’t need to know how to code. You need to know your industry, understand a specific problem worth solving, and be willing to move before everyone else figures out what’s sitting right in front of them.

Why this matters 

But here’s what most of the panicked headlines missed: while investors were fleeing software stocks, they were inadvertently revealing the single greatest window of opportunity for entrepreneurs, digital creators, and aspiring side hustlers in a generation.

The cost of doing things just collapsed. The time to execute an idea  has just compressed. The value of knowing “what to do” skyrocketed.

The Numbers Most People Don’t Know

Before we get to the opportunity, let’s establish what’s actually happening beneath the surface,  because the stats tell a story that mainstream coverage isn’t.

The side hustle economy is projected to triple from $556 billion to over $1.8 trillion by 2032. There are now 41.8 million solopreneurs in the United States alone, contributing more than $1.3 trillion to the economy annually. 

And here’s a surprising stat: 

20% of solopreneurs now earn between $100,000 and $300,000 annually without a single employee.

That was before AI agents could do the work of entire departments.

Meanwhile, 80% of people with side hustles have already used AI to support their work, with 74% calling it their “secret growth weapon.” 

Solopreneurs Powered by AI

The AI-in-creator-economy market hit $4.35 billion in 2025, growing at 31.4% annually and projected to reach $12.85 billion by 2029. And 84% of content creators are already leveraging AI-powered tools in their workflow.

But here’s the number that should really get your attention: 

Businesses using AI are seeing 25–55% productivity increases and generating roughly $3.50–$4.00 in return for every dollar spent on AI solutions. For a solo operator with no overhead, those economics are extraordinary. They’re not incremental improvements. They’re a structural advantage that didn’t exist eighteen months ago.

The percentage of people starting side hustles just to pay basic bills jumped from 11.8% in 2021 to 21.6% in 2024. This isn’t a lifestyle choice anymore. It’s economic survival. And the tools to make it viable just got dramatically more powerful.

Solopreneur Explosion — US solopreneurs (M) vs AI adoption rate (%)

What Changed on January 30th, 2026?

To understand why the Cowork announcement matters beyond stock prices, you need to grasp the shift it represents.

For two decades, the software industry operated on a simple assumption: humans use tools. You paid per seat — per person logging into Salesforce, Jira, QuickBooks, or Adobe. More humans, more seats, more revenue. 

The entire SaaS model was built on the premise that software needed people to operate it.

Cowork plugins shattered that assumption. Now, instead of a human using a CRM to manage sales prospects, an AI agent becomes the sales workflow — researching prospects, preparing deals, automating follow-ups. Instead of ten employees using an accounting suite, one AI agent scans receipts, manages ledgers, and handles tax filings.

Businesses are no longer asking “How many employees will use this?” They’re asking “How many tasks can this AI complete?

That’s why investors panicked. If a single AI agent can manage the workload of ten human operators, the traditional model of charging for ten seats becomes obsolete. Morgan Stanley warned that the era of “easy growth” for SaaS companies is effectively over.

But what terrified Wall Street should electrify entrepreneurs. Here’s why.

It’s the biggest change in history for people with a good idea to monetize and make money from an idea. As the challenge has always been going from coming up with a business concept to finding out if “The world will pay me for it?”

The Upside: Why This Is a Golden Age for Creators and Builders

One of the biggest barriers to go from an idea to creating and launching a digital business was building all the tech. We are now watching the time and cost of doing that collapse.

It is still early days and the promise is still bigger than the reality. And it is now a wild west and the opportunities are for the bold and the courageous. 

But we are now seeing the future. 

1. The Great Equalizer Just Arrived

For the first time in history, a solo entrepreneur with a laptop has access to the same operational capabilities that previously required a funded startup with a team of twenty. 

Marketing? AI agents handle campaigns, copy, A/B testing, and analytics. Sales? Agents manage CRM, prospect research, and follow-up sequences. Legal? Document review and contract analysis. Finance? Bookkeeping, forecasting, and reporting.

The infrastructure cost of starting a real business — not a hobby, a real business with professional operations — just dropped by an order of magnitude. AI freelancers are already commanding $60–$150 per hour on platforms like Upwork for automation services, and AI consulting fees range from $100–$300 per hour for specialized expertise.

So here are the numbers on how much the cost of execution has collapsed.

The Execution Cost Collapse — Annual cost: 2015 traditional team vs 2026 AI-powered solo

2. The “Execution Gap” Has Closed

The biggest barrier for aspiring entrepreneurs was never ideas. 

It was the execution. 

You knew what you wanted to build, but you couldn’t afford the developer, the designer, the marketing team, or the operations manager. So the idea stayed in your head.

That barrier is gone. 

Claude Cowork with plugins can now scaffold an entire project — from the business plan to the landing page to the email sequences to the financial model. Not perfectly. Not without your judgment and taste. But well enough to launch, test, and iterate at a speed that was impossible a year ago.

Technology experts predict that by 2026, AI capabilities will enable solopreneurs to build billion-dollar businesses single-handedly. That’s probably hyperbolic. But six- and seven-figure solo businesses? Those are already here and multiplying fast.

3. New Industries Are Being Born

Every time execution costs collapse, entirely new categories of business emerge. We’re already seeing AI automation consultants earning $3,000+ monthly from just a few small business clients. Local businesses are paying for AI chatbot setups that reduce no-shows and automate lead qualification. AI-powered data analysis practitioners report 15–25 hours per week yielding $3,000–$12,000 monthly.

These aren’t theoretical projections. They’re documented income streams from people who figured out how to package AI capabilities into services that specific customers will pay for.

The opportunity isn’t in AI itself — it’s in the translation layer between what AI can do and what a specific person or business needs done. That translation requires human judgment, domain knowledge, and the ability to understand context. Those are skills that don’t require a computer science degree. They require empathy, experience, and clarity.

The Downside: 4 Ways it Could All Go Wrong

But let’s be honest about the risks, because the opportunity comes with genuine dangers.

1. The Race to the Bottom

When everyone has access to the same AI tools, commoditization follows fast. Content creation, basic design, simple coding — the floor drops out from under anyone whose value proposition was “I can do this task.” If AI can do the task faster and cheaper, the task itself becomes worthless.

The Etsy AI category is already showing signs of saturation, and competition for AI-powered freelance work will intensify through 2026. The median side hustle income actually fell from $250 per month in 2024 to $200 per month in 2025, even as AI adoption rose. More tools doesn’t automatically mean more money.

2. The Authenticity Crisis

When AI can generate unlimited content, design, and code, the signal-to-noise ratio collapses. Audiences get buried in AI-generated everything. Trust erodes. The platforms that distribute your work get flooded.

This creates a paradox: the more powerful AI tools become at creating, the more valuable human authenticity, taste, and originality become as differentiators. But those qualities are harder to develop and harder to prove than technical skills.

3. The Dependency Trap

Building your business on AI platforms means building on ground you don’t own. API prices change. Features disappear. Models get updated in ways that break your workflows. The SaaSpocalypse that hit software companies can hit AI-dependent entrepreneurs just as easily if the underlying economics shift.

4. The Displacement Nobody’s Talking About

The same AI agents that empower entrepreneurs will displace workers. Gartner predicts that by 2028, 33% of enterprise software will include agentic AI, up from less than 1% in 2024. That transition will eliminate roles, compress entire departments, and restructure industries.

The people most affected won’t be the ones reading articles about AI side hustles. They’ll be the administrative workers, the junior analysts, the entry-level professionals whose first career rungs are being automated away. This is a societal challenge that the “AI opportunity” narrative tends to gloss over, and it deserves honest acknowledgment.

The Industries Being Reshaped

The SaaSpocalypse wasn’t random. Specific sectors got hit hardest, and those same sectors represent the biggest opportunity zones for entrepreneurs who can offer alternatives.

Industries Most Vulnerable to AI Agent Disruption — Market value at risk ($B)

Legal services took some of the deepest blows. 

Thomson Reuters dropped 18%, LegalZoom fell dramatically, and RELX lost 14.4% in a single day — investors realized that contract review, compliance tracking, and document analysis could be handled by AI agents costing a fraction of traditional software subscriptions.

Financial services and accounting are in the crosshairs

Intuit’s 34% quarterly drop reflects investor fear that small businesses won’t keep paying for expensive accounting suites when AI agents can handle bookkeeping and tax filing autonomously.

Sales and CRM face perhaps the most existential threat

Salesforce’s 30% decline came as the market realized that if AI agents can manage entire sales pipelines, the per-seat model supporting a $300 billion industry starts to unravel.

Project management and collaboration tools are vulnerable. 

Atlassian’s 35% weekly plunge happened because developers showed they could build custom coordination systems using Claude Code, bypassing Jira and Confluence entirely.

Marketing and content technology is being restructured. 

Publicis fell 9%, WPP nearly 12%, and Omnicom more than 11%. When AI agents can execute campaigns end-to-end, the value shifts from the tool to the strategy — and strategy is something a knowledgeable solo operator can sell.

For entrepreneurs, each of these disrupted industries represents a gap. The legacy software is stumbling. The AI capabilities are arriving. But someone still needs to connect the two in ways that serve specific customers with specific needs. That someone could be you — and you don’t need venture funding to do it.

The Real Opportunity: Not What You Think

Here’s where most people get the opportunity wrong. They see AI tools and think: I’ll use AI to produce more stuff faster. More content. More products. More output.

But the SaaSpocalypse revealed something deeper. When AI can produce anything, production isn’t the bottleneck. Clarity is the bottleneck. Knowing what to build, who to serve, and why it matters — that’s what separates the entrepreneurs who thrive from the ones who drown in their own AI-generated output.

The people who will win this moment aren’t the best prompt engineers. They’re the ones with the clearest understanding of their own strengths, their audience’s needs, and the specific problems worth solving. They’re the ones who can answer the question that no AI agent can answer for you: “What is mine to do?

That’s not a soft question. 

In an economy where execution is nearly free, it’s the hardest and most valuable question there is.

What To Do Next

If you’re an entrepreneur, creator, or aspiring side hustler watching the SaaSpocalypse from the sidelines, here’s the honest version of what this moment demands:

1. Start with clarity, not tools. Before you sign up for another AI platform, get brutally clear on the problem you’re solving and who you’re solving it for. The tools are commodities. Your understanding of a specific audience is not.

2. Pick one lane and go deep. The AI side hustlers earning $3,000–$12,000 monthly aren’t generalists. They’re specialists who chose one industry, one problem, and one type of customer — then built everything around serving that niche extraordinarily well.

3. Build on your experience, not on hype. The greatest unfair advantage for anyone over 30 is decades of pattern recognition, domain knowledge, and professional relationships that no AI model possesses. Your career history isn’t a liability in the AI age. It’s your moat.

4. Move now, but build to last. The window for early movers in AI-powered services is open but narrowing. Competition in AI freelancing will intensify by mid-2026 as the tools become mainstream. The entrepreneurs who establish expertise and client relationships now will have compounding advantages over those who wait.

The Bottom Line

The SaaSpocalypse wasn’t the end of software. It was the beginning of a new era where the value chain is fundamentally being restructured. 

This is shifting power from the tool makers to the tool users, from the platform owners to the people with the clarity and courage to build something that matters.

$285 billion in value didn’t disappear on February 3rd. It migrated. 

It’s waiting to be captured by entrepreneurs who understand that in a world where AI can build anything, the ultimate competitive advantage is knowing exactly what’s worth building.

The question is whether you’ll be one of them.

Think Deeper.  Act Wiser.  Flourish Faster.”

The post AI Just Wiped Out $285 Billion: Why Are Entrepreneurs Celebrating? appeared first on jeffbullas.com.



* This article was originally published here

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You’ve Found Your Purpose. Now What? The 5 Steps From Insight to Action

There is a moment most people never talk about. It comes after the retreat, after the long conversation, after the journaling sessio...