Mark Cuban on the next job wave.
Customized AI integration for small to mid-sized companies.
"Software is dead because everything's gonna be customized to your unique utilization. Who's gonna do it for them... And there are 33 mn companies in the US."
A couple of decades ago, Michael Hammer and James Champy wrote Reengineering the Corporation and introduced the idea: “Don’t automate, obliterate.”
I helped start Healthlink, and we built one of the largest consulting firms in the healthcare industry based on those same reengineering principles. We focused on helping clients redesign processes to fully leverage modern technology.
Now… here we go again.
The AI wave will undoubtedly spawn a new generation of services companies focused on reengineering workflows, changing cultures, retraining labor, and helping organizations optimize an entirely new way of doing business.
Listen to Mark Cuban in this video. What’s not being discussed enough is all the services that will be required to make AI actually work in the real world.
It will be HUGE.
The most valuable skill in history just changed forever.
Elon Musk just handed you the only survival framework that matters.
Musk: “The biggest thing is, what questions do we not know to ask?”
For centuries, the smartest person in the room held the most answers.
AI didn’t level the playing field. It burned it down.
Superintelligence in your pocket answers anything. Instantly. Perfectly. For free.
Musk: “Once you know the question, the answer is usually the easy part.”
Let that land.
The next generation of winners won’t be defined by what they know. They’ll be defined by what they think to ask.
AI commoditized execution.
Script, plan, code, strategy. Models handle all of it.
The bottleneck was never intelligence. It was never labor. It’s curiosity. It’s always been curiosity.
Traditional education spent decades training you to memorize answers. AI made that obsolete overnight.
Human value is no longer tied to knowledge. It’s tied to the judgment of which problems are even worth solving.
That’s the gap machines can’t close.
Because asking the right question isn’t a skill. It’s a worldview.
It requires taste. Intuition. The ability to look at a landscape everyone else is staring at and see the one thing nobody thought to interrogate.
Master the art of asking the exact right question to a machine that knows everything and you can build anything.
The skill isn’t knowing. It’s knowing what to ask.
That judgment, that taste for what’s worth pursuing, that’s the last truly human edge. The only one markets will keep paying for.
Answers are infinite now. Free, instant, and available to everyone on earth equally.
The only thing separating you from the person who builds the next great company is the quality of your questions.
Answers are free. Questions are everything.