Economists are only beginning to scratch the surface on something that's about to get messy—the internal power struggles over AI within major corporations. Right now, most attention goes to competition between companies, but what's brewing inside them might be equally consequential. Different departments, business units, and leadership camps are already positioning themselves to control AI initiatives and capture the upside. The tension between legacy operations and AI-first teams, between data scientists and product managers, between quarterly results and long-term AI bets—these aren't minor organizational issues. They're going to be fierce. And they matter because how companies sort out these internal battles will determine their survival in an AI-dominated economy. The winners will be the organizations that manage this chaos fastest.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
13 Likes
Reward
13
5
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
ProofOfNothing
· 8h ago
Wow, the internal AI power struggle within big companies is the real highlight...
View OriginalReply0
SchroedingerGas
· 8h ago
Internal power struggles within large companies are the real bloodbaths, more brutal than external competition.
View OriginalReply0
On-ChainDiver
· 8h ago
This is the real highlight—internal power struggles are often more deadly than external competition.
View OriginalReply0
CodeZeroBasis
· 8h ago
Internal power struggles are the key, even more brutal than competition between companies.
View OriginalReply0
WhaleWatcher
· 8h ago
In simple terms, the big companies are about to start internal battles, and this is the real AI war.
---
Internal power struggles are more dangerous than competition between companies. Those who can make quick decisions will survive.
---
Legacy team vs AI-first, this rift will come sooner or later. I'm quite interested to see who will laugh last.
---
Data scientists and product managers are fighting, which is typical. Organizational chaos is the real killer.
---
The key is still execution speed; those who can quickly reconcile these conflicts are the winners. Everything else is superficial.
---
This time, it's not about whose AI is stronger, but whose organization can withstand this internal friction. It's interesting.
---
Everyone is watching how OpenAI and Google compete, but in fact, they've already blown up internally.
---
The conflict between quarterly results and long-term bets is an eternal corporate dilemma.
Economists are only beginning to scratch the surface on something that's about to get messy—the internal power struggles over AI within major corporations. Right now, most attention goes to competition between companies, but what's brewing inside them might be equally consequential. Different departments, business units, and leadership camps are already positioning themselves to control AI initiatives and capture the upside. The tension between legacy operations and AI-first teams, between data scientists and product managers, between quarterly results and long-term AI bets—these aren't minor organizational issues. They're going to be fierce. And they matter because how companies sort out these internal battles will determine their survival in an AI-dominated economy. The winners will be the organizations that manage this chaos fastest.