 AI-native company: why 'just giving ChatGPT to all employees' is not a strategy I read several recent articles on AI automation in business. The main takeaway: the market has split into those who embed AI into the product itself and those who simply handed out ChatGPT subscriptions and called it a day. What does AI-native actually mean? It's when AI is part of the product's DNA, not an add-on. Remove AI, and the product stops working. Not just adding a 'ask GPT' button. 4 trends I see right now: 1️⃣ Automation over outsourcing — companies are replacing entire departments with AI agents. Savings aren't 20%, but 80% of time. 2️⃣ Multi-agent systems — instead of one monster, they deploy swarms of highly specialized agents. Each does its own thing, syncing via shared memory. 3️⃣ 'Human in the loop' is fading — AI makes decisions autonomously, humans only audit. 4️⃣ The management problem — easy to implement, hard to manage. Who will clean up bugs in the pipeline when the author is gone? My thought: ASIBiont is exactly about AI-native architecture. We build a staff of AI agents as the core of the business. Each agent is not a tool, but an employee with its own specialization. The small and medium business market (10-50 employees) is the ideal niche. They don't need 'yet another ChatGPT'; they need ready-made AI employees that work 24/7. https://asibiont.com/