If people find it useful but enterprise adoption is lagging, doesn't that indicate there's still a big upside?
On the other hand, I remember when BlackBerry had enterprise locked down and got wiped out by consumer focused Apple.
In any event, having big consumer growth doesn't seem like a bad thing.
It will be bad if it starts a race to the bottom for ad driven offering though.
It’s been shoved down enterprise throats for months/years. Shareholders, CEOs, workers (at the start) and users (at the start) have never had such a unified understanding in what they want than this AI frenzy. All stars were aligned for it to gain more traction. And yet…
It’s the prodigal child of tech.
> If people find it useful but enterprise adoption is lagging, doesn't that indicate there's still a big upside?
It could indicate that many people find it more of an entertainment product than a tool, and those are often harder to monetize. You've got ads, and that's about it, and puts a probable cap on your monthly revenue per user that's less than most of the subscription prices these companies are trying to get (especially in non-USA countries).
(I find it way more of a tool and basically don't use it outside of work... but I see a LOT of AI pics and videos in discord and forums and such.)
When Apple sells a device, they get more revenue with minimal coats turbocharging revenue and profits.
When OpenAI sells a ChatGPT subscription, they incur large costs just to serve the product, shrinking margins.
Big difference in unit economics, hence the quantization push.