Silicon Valley Entrepreneurship Guru Steve Blank: In the AI Era, Startups Over Two Years Old Should Reboot
Original Article Title: Your Startup Is Probably Dead On Arrival
Original Article Author: Steve Blank, Entrepreneurship Methodology Expert
Original Article Translation: DeepTech TechFlow
DeepTech Summary: The author of this article, Steve Blank, is very well-known in the Silicon Valley startup community and is often called the "Father of Lean Startup." He wrote "The Four Steps to the Epiphany" and is the originator of the Customer Development methodology.
Eric Ries' "The Lean Startup" is built upon his theories. He has taught entrepreneurship at Stanford, UC Berkeley, and Columbia University, and the U.S. National Science Foundation's I-Corps program is also based on his methodology.
Recently, Steve Blank had coffee with a founder he had invested in and discovered that after six years of hard work, the founder was completely unaware that the world outside had changed.
As a result, he wrote this article with a very direct core point:
If your company has been around for more than two years, there's a high probability that your business plan is already outdated. AI is reshaping development speed, team size, pricing models, and competitive barriers. Founders still running on the 2024 script may not make it to the next round of funding.
For readers who are either entrepreneurs or interested in the tech and venture capital community, this firsthand observation from across the ocean is worth reading.

Below is the full translation of the article.
If your company has been around for more than two years, many of your initial assumptions have likely become invalid.
You need to pause whatever you are doing, whether it's coding, product development, hiring, or fundraising, and take a look around. Otherwise, your company will die.
Anxiety Triggered by a Cup of Coffee
I just had coffee with Chris. Chris is a founder I invested in six years ago, and since then, he has been working tirelessly on:
2) In an existing market,
3) with a unique business model.
Chris is now preparing to launch the first round of large-scale funding. I looked at his investor deck and found an issue: While he has been head down working hard these past few years, the outside world has completely transformed.
The proprietary system software barrier he spent five years building is becoming less and less unique. The emergence of Ukrainian autonomous drones and ground vehicles has led to dozens, even hundreds of companies with larger teams and more funding doing the same thing.
Chris has been fighting for customer adoption in his niche market (which indeed needs disruption, but the incumbents are still holding strong). Meanwhile, the autonomous technology demand in an adjacent market has exploded: defense.
Over the past five years, VC investment in defense startups has skyrocketed from zero to $200 billion annually. His product is a perfect fit for logistics support and medical evacuation in a contested environment. But he is unaware of these opportunities in the defense market.
Chris's team has indeed done an impressive job of system integration (deeply integrating with an existing flight platform, making his solution different from most competitors), and the business is there, but it's no longer the business they originally envisioned.
After talking to Chris, I realized: for most startups that have been around for over two years, the business plan is outdated, and the technology stack and team composition are likely obsolete.
If you haven't looked up recently, here's what you've missed.
What Has Changed
VC money has heavily shifted towards AI. By 2025, AI projects took two-thirds of the total VC investment. This means that if you are not working on something AI-related, you are competing for a smaller funding pool. Non-AI startups must answer one question: why can't a better-funded AI-native competitor directly eat your market?
For software founders, AI has completely rewritten the old formula of cost, speed, and manpower. With tools like Claude Code or OpenAI Codex for Vibe Coding, an MVP (Minimum Viable Product) can be done in a matter of days, even hours, no longer requiring months. This also means that an MVP alone no longer demonstrates your team's capabilities.

These Tools Are Changing the Composition of Development Teams: The number of engineers has decreased, and the type of engineers has changed, with the emergence of "Business Process Engineers" and "Deep-Tech Engineers."
What used to require a whole development team can now be done by a few people, sometimes even by one person. Data used to be a differentiator and a moat, but now foundational models (such as ChatGPT, Gemini, Claude) are commercializing open data sources.

Caption: Model T vs Ferrari
The concept of Agile Development itself needs to be rethought.
The old bottleneck used to be: Can we afford to build and release this product? The new bottleneck is: Do we know what to test? Can we reach users fast enough to learn? Agile is no longer a linear process. An AI Agent can run multiple tasks in parallel at the same or even lower cost.
You can now simultaneously test multiple versions of the same business, or even test different business directions at the same time. You can run five pricing models, ten marketing messages, and twenty UX flows simultaneously. And the "user interface" may no longer be a screen; the testing goal may have become: Find the prompt that gets the AI Agent to deliver the desired outcome.

Caption: The Shift from UI to AI Agent
The bottleneck is no longer engineering capability but has shifted to judgment, insight into customer expected outcomes, and distribution.
AI Agent Will Rewrite Every Software Category
The AI Agent will transform every software category, including the one you're working on.
Today's software applications operate by presenting information to users and then waiting for users to act through dashboards, alerts, workflow tools, and reports. However, customers buy software to get a job done, not to look at more screens. Enabling the job to be done is what the AI Agent (orchestrated through tools like OpenClaw) will autonomously achieve.
What does this mean?
If your product currently guides users on "what to do next," an AI agent will eventually take that next step for the user. If a competitor's product automatically completes tasks while your product still waits for the user to click a mouse, you will lose your competitive edge.
The next-generation applications will not just display information on the screen; they will act like an employee: resolving tickets, scheduling meetings, qualifying sales leads, and automatically replenishing stock. As products transition from "software is the interface" to "software is the outcome," pricing will also shift from per-seat charges to per-outcome charges: for every ticket resolved, every meeting booked, and every lead closed.
(The pursuit of Product/Market Fit will evolve into the pursuit of AI Agent/Customer Outcome Fit. The Minimum Viable Product (MVP) will become the Minimum Performable Outcome (MPO). I will expand on this topic in the next article.)
Hardware Is Not Spared Either
For hardware founders, the change is equally profound. Hardware is still constrained by physical laws, capital, the supply chain, and manufacturing cycles—you can't skip metal cutting, prototyping, or chip fabrication.
But AI can help you weed out bad ideas faster. Now, you can simulate more design variations before manufacturing a physical prototype, create a digital twin, stress test assumptions earlier and cheaper. The result is an acceleration in learning and discovery (sometimes toward faster failures), and in a startup, faster failure is an advantage, not a drawback.
Once AI is embedded as part of the system, the product itself changes. Adding an AI backend to a camera turns the camera into a monitoring system, vibration sensor, or machine failure prediction system. Robots become factory workers. The moat is no longer just the hardware itself but what the hardware can sense coupled with what AI can do with that data in terms of decision-making and action.
Sunk Cost Trap
Companies founded before 2025 typically optimized their tech stacks for a world where software development was expensive and bespoke. Agile development and DevSecOps made us lean, but they operated in silos, and team sizes were structured accordingly.
Companies that spent years building a "proprietary code and feature moat" are now finding AI is commoditizing most of their tech stack. This has put venture-backed startups in an awkward position: their business model may be partially or completely outdated.
When you are heads down building a product, searching for Product/Market Fit, these changes may not always be visible.
Your tech stack, product features, user interface, team size—all these sunk costs can become reasons you are unwilling to pivot: How can we throw away years of work? Our VC backed us in this direction. The customers still want the UI. The team believes in this roadmap. Our clients are not ready yet.
(Chris is a classic case. He built something truly impressive, likely competitive, but the business model around it needs to change.)
Some sunk costs are actually assets: deep domain knowledge, customer relationships, proprietary data, hard-earned regulatory approvals, physical integrations. These are worth holding onto. Chris's flight platform integration falls into this category.
The truly debt-like sunk costs are: large engineering teams built for a slow software cycle, seat-based pricing models, product roadmaps built around features rather than outcomes. These are the so-called "Dead Moose on the table," the problem is obvious, but no one is willing to address it.
The surviving founders are those who can look at what they've built and ask themselves: If I were to start a new business today using today's tools, in today's market, what would I actually do?
When you are already funded in a particular direction, this question is uncomfortable. But compared to investors telling you they are not going to fund the next round, and then you shutting down with an outdated plan, this discomfort is nothing.
Summary
· You can't run the 2026 race with a 2024 (or earlier) script. Funding, tech, business models have all changed. Agile development is turning into parallel development.
· The pursuit of Product/Market Fit will turn into the pursuit of AI Agent/Customer Outcome Fit. MVP will turn into MPO (Minimum Path to Deliverable Outcome).
· A sunk cost mindset will lead to your bankruptcy.
· Defendable moats may still exist in: proprietary data, deep understanding of customer outcomes, regulatory lock-ins, or becoming a Program of Record.
· If you can sleep soundly, it means you haven't yet figured out what's happening.
· A surviving founder will step out of the office, see the big picture, pivot, and course-correct.
You may also like

Cryptocurrency CEXs are flocking to sell US stocks, and traditional brokerages are facing an "uninvited guest."

Will the SpaceX IPO Hurt Bitcoin? Here's What Traders Are Watching

Foreign selling in the South Korean stock market accelerates, with cumulative net sales reportedly reaching $75 billion this year
On June 9, The Kobeissi Letter, citing Goldman Sachs data, reported that global investors are selling South Korean stocks at an unusually rapid pace. In the latest trading session, foreign investors sold about $801 million worth of Kospi constituent stocks again; total foreign outflows last week reached about $10 billion, and the market has been in net foreign selling on nearly every trading day over the past month. According to the data cited in the report, foreign investors have sold about $75 billion worth of South Korean stocks so far this year. Meanwhile, South Korean retail and institutional investors together recorded roughly $69 billion in net buying over the same period, suggesting that the market’s main buying support has come from domestic capital rather than returning overseas funds. The information currently disclosed still mainly comes from The Kobeissi Letter’s retelling and Goldman Sachs data summaries, while public details on the statistical period and the specific definition of “selling” remain relatively limited.

Fortune Warns of Strategy’s Financing Structure Risks as Bitcoin Premium Narrows
Fortune warned that Strategy’s Bitcoin treasury model faces growing financing risks as MSTR’s net asset premium narrows and preferred stock dividend pressure increases.

Ferrari Challenge Le Mans: Carl Moon to Dominate in WEEX Livery

Sahara AI Responds to SAHARA’s Sharp Drop: No Contract or Product Security Issues Found, Internal Investigation Underway
Sahara AI responded to SAHARA’s 60% price drop, saying no token contract or product security issues have been found and an internal investigation is underway.

WEEX Deposit/Withdrawal Dynamic Island: Your Asset Status, Always in Sight

Scaling Crypto Derivatives: The Digital Asset Infrastructure Behind High-Volume Trading
In the fast-moving digital asset ecosystem, derivatives platforms face an extreme architectural test. High-leverage futures markets demand more than just standard security—they require absolute operational precision, zero-latency matching engines, and ironclad structural scalability, all while navigating intense market volatility.
As global platforms scale to meet these demands, the industry is shifting away from rigid, monolithic setups toward a more agile, "decoupled" infrastructure philosophy.
The Blueprint for High-Volume Copy TradingFor elite global exchanges like WEEX (founded in 2018), this architectural choice becomes critical when scaling high-volume retail features like social copy trading. When thousands of users automatically mirror the real-time strategies of elite traders simultaneously, it triggers sudden, monumental spikes in concurrent transactional volume.
To prevent execution latency or settlement bottlenecks during these peak volatility events, a platform's primary engine must remain entirely dedicated to risk management, copy-trade synchronization, and order matching.
The Architectural Rule: New-generation platforms must separate front-end user execution engines from heavy backend infrastructural overhead to eliminate operational friction.
By separating these layers, platforms can maintain complete sovereignty over their trading environments and user experiences while strategically aligning with institutional-grade infrastructure ecosystems. This strategic framework allows modern exchanges to leverage advanced Digital Asset Custody infrastructure such as Cobo’s behind the scenes, ensuring that backend wallet management scales elastically alongside trading spikes.
Capitalizing on Market Momentum and 400× LeverageIn a derivatives arena where platforms offer up to 400× leverage on perpetual contracts, capital efficiency and market agility are core business metrics. To capture market momentum, an exchange needs the ability to rapidly expand its asset offerings, supporting everything from legacy crypto assets to sudden, trending altcoins across a massive library of trading pairs.
Adopting a flexible, scalable Wallet-as-a-Service (WaaS) solution such as Cobo’s could completely rewrite the development timeline for high-growth exchanges. Instead of spending months of engineering capital building out custom backend wallet architectures for every new blockchain network, platforms can deploy localized infrastructure in days.
This agility allows platforms to instantly scale their listings to over a thousand trading pairs without compromising security or delaying time-to-market. It mirrors the exact operational advantages seen during high-velocity market events, similar to how advanced wallet infrastructure empowers platforms during sudden asset surges; allowing exchanges to pass that speed and liquidity directly to their global user base.
A Mature Foundation for GrowthThe synergy between trusted infrastructure ecosystems and global trading platforms represents the natural evolution of a maturing crypto market. As WEEX continues to scale its global spot and derivatives offerings for over 6 million users, adopting robust backend paradigms proves that platforms no longer have to compromise between cutting-edge trading velocity and uncompromised structural security.

Morning Report | BitMine increased its holdings by 126,971 ETH last week; trader Eugene announced his exit from the crypto market

Wang Chuan: How can one not feel anxious after the neighbor Old Wang made thirty times profit by investing in storage stocks? (Seven) - A quarter-century cycle

Get Paid to Onboard? Try WEEX’s New Homepage with Rewards for Registration, Deposit & Trade

WEEX Custom Layout: Build Your Perfect Trading Workspace in Seconds

See “Buy Walls” & “Sell Walls” Instantly: WEEX Launches the Depth Chart for Smarter Trades

What Is Quick Trade on WEEX? 2 Ways WEEX Ends Chart-Panel Jumping

Morning News | Five major virtual asset platforms in South Korea have experienced 57 incidents of hacking and system failures in six years; Grayscale submits registration application for Canton ETF

Should we escape the peak? The principle of the tail-end market in the stock market

RootData: May 2026 Cryptocurrency Exchange Transparency Research Report

Founder of Baixing.com: My Experience with Claude Code in Fourteen Points
Cryptocurrency CEXs are flocking to sell US stocks, and traditional brokerages are facing an "uninvited guest."
Will the SpaceX IPO Hurt Bitcoin? Here's What Traders Are Watching
Foreign selling in the South Korean stock market accelerates, with cumulative net sales reportedly reaching $75 billion this year
On June 9, The Kobeissi Letter, citing Goldman Sachs data, reported that global investors are selling South Korean stocks at an unusually rapid pace. In the latest trading session, foreign investors sold about $801 million worth of Kospi constituent stocks again; total foreign outflows last week reached about $10 billion, and the market has been in net foreign selling on nearly every trading day over the past month. According to the data cited in the report, foreign investors have sold about $75 billion worth of South Korean stocks so far this year. Meanwhile, South Korean retail and institutional investors together recorded roughly $69 billion in net buying over the same period, suggesting that the market’s main buying support has come from domestic capital rather than returning overseas funds. The information currently disclosed still mainly comes from The Kobeissi Letter’s retelling and Goldman Sachs data summaries, while public details on the statistical period and the specific definition of “selling” remain relatively limited.
Fortune Warns of Strategy’s Financing Structure Risks as Bitcoin Premium Narrows
Fortune warned that Strategy’s Bitcoin treasury model faces growing financing risks as MSTR’s net asset premium narrows and preferred stock dividend pressure increases.
Ferrari Challenge Le Mans: Carl Moon to Dominate in WEEX Livery
Sahara AI Responds to SAHARA’s Sharp Drop: No Contract or Product Security Issues Found, Internal Investigation Underway
Sahara AI responded to SAHARA’s 60% price drop, saying no token contract or product security issues have been found and an internal investigation is underway.
