> The big distinction is that LLMs already have a whole bunch of things they're great at
I would say mediocre not great, and it is up to market to decide if quality threshold is crossed. So far there is no reliable data that some LLM startup started making good money and clients didn't leave after 1 year of mediocre results.
I feel like LLMs won't find their success in this "here's a LLM product!" kind of way but more by being leveraged internally by companies to increase velocity, do more with fewer employees, etc. I've certainly gained a lot from LLMs just by getting help on my own projects.
I would say mediocre not great, and it is up to market to decide if quality threshold is crossed. So far there is no reliable data that some LLM startup started making good money and clients didn't leave after 1 year of mediocre results.