We’ve entered an era where anyone can build almost anything.
Ideas that once required capital, teams and time can now be prototyped in a weekend with a laptop and a prompt.
Shopify makes it dead simple (and cheap) to sell something to anyone in the world.
Online services make everything from registering a business to accounting software a simple sign-in away.
Starting a business once meant jumping over difficult hurdles… now it’s like stepping over a crack in the sidewalk.
It feels thrilling… and dangerous.
Because when the barriers to creation fall away, what separates the creator from the noise?
Entrepreneurship used to be an act of risk.
Now it’s an act of refinement.
It’s less about can you build it… and more about why should it exist at all?
What’s even more interesting is that even though it’s never been easier and cheaper to start a business, the vast majority of businesses still fail (you can dig into the data but it’s somewhere in the 70% – 90% range).
That’s the strange paradox of this moment.
The tools have never been more powerful… yet the purpose has never been more fragile… and the market is increasingly more brutal.
We’ve spent decades celebrating the hustle… the garage, the grind, the startup mythology of scarcity.
But now, when abundance is the default, meaning and finding markets becomes the real scarcity.
AI has made the act of starting even easier… and the act of mattering infinitely harder.
This new age of entrepreneurship won’t be defined by who moves fastest (I’ve been tired of the notion of “speed” for some time).
It will be defined by who moves with intention.
By those willing to pause and ask the question every algorithm skips:
Does this make someone’s life better in a way that can’t be automated?
Because when the cost of creating approaches zero, the cost of attention and intimacy becomes everything.
And intimacy can’t be scaled the same way code can.
I was thinking about all of this while editing this week’s episode of Thinking With Mitch Joel and my conversation with Henrik Werdelin (the entrepreneur, investor, and author of Me, My Customer and AI, which explores how technology is reshaping the entrepreneurial mindset).
Henrik reminded me that innovation doesn’t always begin with technology… it begins with empathy.
AI can make us faster, smarter and more efficient.
But it can’t make us care.
And if we forget that, we risk automating the soul out of creation itself.
The best entrepreneurs have always been translators… taking human problems and turning them into possibilities.
That hasn’t changed.
What’s changing is the speed at which those translations happen… and the risk that we stop listening long enough to understand what truly needs to be translated.
This moment asks something different from builders.
Not just to create… but to curate.
Not just to innovate… but to introspect.
Because in this new age of entrepreneurship, the real competition isn’t other startups or founders.
It’s indifference.
Anyone can build a business.
But only those who build with care will build something that lasts.
The future of entrepreneurship isn’t artificial… it’s deeply… deliberately… human.
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