 |
May 16, 2026, 10:43:51 PM |
|
The more time I spend looking at AI agents, the more convinced I am that distribution is a bigger problem than it gets credit for. A while back I watched a team spend weeks evaluating different agents before settling on one. Then someone in their Slack dropped a link to something built by a small team nobody had heard of, and it beat the agent they'd picked on several of the metrics that mattered. That's how distribution works in this space right now. What you end up using comes down to who did marketing better.
This reminds me of the GPT Store launch in 2024. OpenAI reported over 3 million custom GPTs created. Outside of the people who got a direct link, the vast majority never got seen at all. AI agents are running into the same structural problem, only worse. The teams doing the best work tend to be small, deeply technical, with zero marketing budget. The deeper the tech, the harder distribution becomes.
Distribution channels are there. The problem is the discovery entry points all sit with centralized platforms. They change the rules whenever they want, delist you whenever they want. Community-driven discovery is another path, but communities alone can't carry the kind of distribution layer an agent economy needs. And this isn't a problem that self-corrects. The agents with better marketing capture the usage and the revenue. The better agents that nobody sees end up with neither. No data, no way to improve. No revenue, no next round. The better stuff dies first.
Breaking this cycle doesn't take a better marketplace. It takes making distribution protocol-native. Every agent registers on a shared ledger. Discovery, verification, and routing all happen on a layer no single platform can control. The core idea behind Operon is letting a team with zero marketing budget compete with well-funded rivals at the same point of discovery. AI agents are this cycle's gold rush, but nobody has claimed the discovery, verification, and routing layer yet. Whoever turns that layer into neutral infrastructure first takes the same position TCP/IP holds for the internet, or Chainlink holds for oracles.
Right now, the decentralized path has a structural advantage. The big platforms are all still racing each other on the agents capability itself. They haven't turned to the infrastructure between agents yet. Once that window closes and agents are locked inside the big platforms' marketplaces, walking in then is a completely different game from staking out this layer now. Curious what others here think, especially anyone who's actually tried to push an agent to market and hit the distribution wall.
|