What money alone cannot build?

“For founders, the question is which part of that transformation requires something that money alone cannot build.”

This line stayed with me.

Every founder I speak to right now is asking the same question: what should I build?

Frontier AI models are moving fast. What looked like a defensible product six months ago feels like a feature today. Advice is everywhere, and most of it is too generic to act on.

Then I read something that actually answered the question directly. S. Somasegar and Rasik Parikh at Madrona Venture Group cut through the noise in a way most commentary does not. Here is how I read it.

Three areas where founders can still build with conviction.

1. Own the liability, not just the tool.

Frontier Labs will build powerful general-purpose systems. They will not absorb the legal, regulatory, and financial accountability that comes with specific outcomes in specific industries. I have watched Indian IT firms lose deals on exactly this gap — clients want someone to sign off and stand behind the result, not just ship the capability. That willingness to own risk is where durable margin lives.

2. Build on data others do not have.

Models are trained on what is public. The edge sits in what is not — internal workflows, edge cases, decisions, and historical context. When I built Simpligic years before GenAI was a term, the insight was the same: the moat lives in private data. If your product compounds with every customer interaction, you are in a territory the model labs have no roadmap to enter.

3. Go deep into messy workflows.

Some problems are not solved by more intelligence. They are solved by understanding how work actually gets done — across people, exceptions, approvals, and institutional habits built over decades. At Vishwak, the client relationships that held through every disruption were the ones where we were embedded in their delivery model, not just their vendor list. A two-year integration into how a firm actually operates is not something a foundation model company will replicate. There is no incentive to.

Here is the framing I keep coming back to from the piece: the difference between a tool and an outcome. A tool makes a task easier. An outcome means you are on the hook for the result. Most of what is being built right now — including a lot of what gets funded — is tools. The businesses that will matter in five years are the ones that own the outcome.

The question founders should be asking is not whether their product needs AI. That is the wrong filter. Soon enough, everything will. The more useful question is whether the solution requires something AI cannot supply on its own — a regulator who trusts you, data that never left your client’s firewall, a workflow only you understand end to end, or accountability that someone has to sign their name to.

The article makes one more point that deserves to land. This buildout — hyperscalers, foundation models, the entire stack — is a multi-trillion-dollar bet that AI will transform every industry. That bet will pay off. But transformation and value creation are not the same thing. Value will concentrate in the places where technology alone is not sufficient. That is the territory worth building in.

Full credit to Soma Somasegar and Rasik at Madrona for articulating this clearly. Soma is someone whose thinking I have followed for a long time — I first met him in 2005 when he led the Developer Division at Microsoft — someone who has always taken the long view, and has usually been right about it.l.

The article from Madrona is here.


If you are a founder stress-testing where to build, this is the kind of question I regularly dig into with the leaders I work with. Reach out at thefoundercatalyst.com or connect with me at linkedin.com/in/venkatarangan

One response

  1. Two days ago I wrote about where founders can still build with conviction — even as frontier AI moves into everything. One of the three areas I touched on: own the liability, not just the tool.

    This morning I saw exactly what that looks like in practice.

    Microsoft shipped a Legal Agent inside Word. Microsoft’s President Brad Smith announced it personally — structured workflows, redlines, lawyers staying in control. Good product. Thoughtful framing.

    Notice what Microsoft is not doing. They are not filing your contracts. They are not absorbing malpractice exposure. They are not standing behind the outcome if a clause gets missed. They are building the tool. Beautifully, at scale, with Satya Nadella’s full weight behind it.

    That is exactly the point from the Madrona piece I shared earlier. The gap between a tool that assists a lawyer and a platform that owns the legal outcome is not a product gap. It is an accountability gap. And that gap is where a founder can build something Microsoft has no particular incentive to touch.

    The infrastructure keeps getting better. The territory it leaves behind keeps getting clearer.

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About Venkatarangan

Venkatarangan Thirumalai is a Technology Visionary, Author, and Keynote Speaker on Generative AI with 30+ years in software. An Honorary Microsoft Regional Director since 1999, he advises CXOs on tech-driven growth.

Founder of Vishwak Solutions and co-founder of a US AI fintech startup, he predicted mobile computing in 2003 and built an ML news app long before GenAI. He mentors startups and promotes responsible AI through his book The Founder Catalyst.

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