The path from AI demo to enterprise deployment is littered with failed startups. In a recent episode of Category Visionaries, Contextual AI CEO Douwe Kiela shared hard-earned insights about bringing AI products to market. Here are five critical lessons for founders building enterprise AI companies.
1. Cure Demo Disease Early
The enterprise AI market suffers from what Douwe calls “demo disease” – the ability to build impressive demos that fail in production. “A lot of companies are building cool demos that kind of show the potential of the technology, but then they have a hard time bridging the gap to a production deployment,” he explains.
The solution isn’t better demos – it’s focusing on production-grade solutions from the start. This means tackling thorny issues like hallucination, attribution, and data privacy head-on, rather than glossing over them with flashy capabilities.
2. Let Market Pull Guide Your Focus
Instead of pushing technology solutions, let enterprise problems pull you in the right direction. As Douwe shares, “We’re in a very fortunate position where we’re basically not doing any outreach and folks are coming to us with their problems.”
This market-pull approach helps identify which problems are genuinely worth solving. When Fortune 500 companies actively seek you out with specific problems, you know you’re addressing real market needs.
3. Filter for Tech-Forward Customers
Not all enterprise customers are equally ready for AI adoption. Douwe notes you can “really tell initial conversations with these kinds of companies how tech forward they really are.” The ideal customers are those who “already know exactly, like, these are like the, I don’t know, top 10 use cases that we’re most interested in. We’re not going to put all of our eggs in one basket.”
This filtering process is crucial – working with the right early customers shapes both your product development and go-to-market strategy.
4. Build Deployment Flexibility Into Your DNA
Enterprise needs vary widely, especially around data privacy and security. Douwe explains their approach: “One of the things that we can do with our technology is deploy the AI models inside the VPC of our customers… but we also offer a SaaS solution where we essentially just host the infrastructure ourselves.”
This flexibility in deployment models helps address key enterprise concerns like “stillness and compliance, data privacy. You don’t really want to send your data off to somebody else’s language model and then they can do with your data whatever they want.”
5. Focus on Specialized Over General Solutions
While many AI companies chase artificial general intelligence (AGI), enterprise success often comes from specialized solutions. “Where I think the real solution lies is in much more specialized solutions,” Douwe argues. “So artificial specialized intelligence, where you take these models and then you make them very good at the one thing that an enterprise really wants to solve.”
This specialization enables a powerful vision where employees become “their own CEOs of their own little teams of AI coworkers,” focusing on concrete productivity gains rather than nebulous general capabilities.
Preparing for the Post-Hype Reality
These lessons become even more crucial as the AI market matures. As Douwe predicts, “The hype train is going to stop at some point and so the tide is going to run out and a bunch of people are going to get caught swimming naked.”
Companies that follow these principles – focusing on production-grade solutions, letting market demand guide development, targeting the right customers, offering flexible deployment, and specializing in specific use cases – will be better positioned to survive and thrive when the hype cycle ends.
For AI founders, the message is clear: the path to success isn’t through better demos or more general capabilities. It’s through solving specific, high-value problems for enterprises that are ready to adopt AI solutions. As Douwe reminds us, “AI is going to change a lot of things in our lives, but the thing it is going to change the most substantially is the way we work. It is literally going to change the way the world works.”