AI is no longer the edge. Expertise is.

This meme made me laugh because it is painfully real.
A lot of people are not struggling because there are not enough tools.
They are struggling because every new tool comes with its own learning curve, setup, workflow, dashboard, logic, and best practices.
And now AI has made that even more visible.
On paper, it feels like the problem is solved.
You can access incredible models.
You can automate tasks.
You can generate content.
You can run workflows.
You can move faster than ever.
But in practice, a new problem shows up:
now you need to know how to use all of it well.
That means knowing what to ask.
What to ignore.
What to automate.
What still needs human judgment.
What “good” even looks like.
That is where human expertise still matters a lot.
AI can do an incredible amount of the heavy lifting.
But without the right person guiding it, it often becomes one more system to learn, one more dashboard to manage, and one more thing sitting in the stack without reaching its full value.
We felt this very clearly with Starnus.
When we added our managed service, we honestly did not expect it to become the more popular option so quickly.
At first, we thought more people would prefer to use everything fully self-serve.
But what we saw was different.
A lot of people did not just want access to the system.
They wanted help from people who already knew how to sell properly.
They wanted the benefit of AI, without having to become experts in sales.
That is why the managed service started getting so much attention.
Not because people do not want software.
But because many teams want software plus expertise.
They want the speed and leverage of AI, with human judgment on top.
I think that combination is becoming much more important:
AI does the repetitive heavy lifting.
Experts make the important decisions.
The result is better than either one alone.


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