Trillion-Dollar Market: The Autonomous Economy is Rising in Web3
Author: 0xJeff
Compiled by: Deep Tide TechFlow
Every technological revolution gives rise to a brand new economic model:
Industrial Revolution ➔ Manufacturing Economy
Personal Computer ➔ Software Economy
Internet ➔ E-commerce Economy
Streaming ➔ Subscription Economy
Public Cloud ➔ SaaS (Software as a Service) Economy
iPhone ➔ App Economy
Social Media ➔ Creator Economy
Bitcoin and Blockchain ➔ Cryptocurrency/Web3 Economy ➔ Decentralized Finance (DeFi) Economy
Electric Vehicles ➔ Clean/Green Tech Economy
Artificial Intelligence/ Machine Learning (AI/ ML, Large Language Models) ➔ Predictive/Automated Economy**
Large Language Models ( LLMs ) ➔ Autonomous Economy
Rise of the Giants
In these technological transformations, some giant companies always emerge, dominating most of the market in the new economy:
Industrial Revolution: General Electric, Ford, Siemens, Caterpillar
Software Economy: Microsoft, IBM, Oracle, Adobe
E-commerce: Amazon, eBay, Alibaba, Shopify
Subscription Economy: Netflix, Spotify, Disney+, Hulu
SaaS Economy: AWS (Amazon Web Services), Microsoft Azure, Google Cloud, Salesforce, ServiceNow
App Economy: Apple, Google Play (Android), Tencent (WeChat), Meta (Instagram/WhatsApp)
Creator Economy: Meta (Facebook, Instagram), YouTube, TikTok, Patreon, Substack
Crypto Economy: Coinbase, Binance, Ethereum, Solana, Uniswap, Aave
Green Tech Economy: Tesla, BYD, Rivian, Lucid, ChargePoint, CATL (batteries)
Predictive/Automated Economy: Google DeepMind, Palantir, Nvidia, UiPath
Autonomous Economy: OpenAI, Anthropic, Grok, DeepSeek, Alibaba, Hugging Face
Disruptors' Entry Points
These giants attempt to predict and capture the next emerging economic field, but due to their size and strategic focus, they cannot cover all niche areas. This creates opportunities for smaller, more agile companies that can quickly experiment with ideas and focus on extremely niche markets:
Notion: Disrupting traditional enterprise collaboration and knowledge management tools (like Confluence, SharePoint)
Perplexity: Disrupting the search and information retrieval space (like Google Search, Wikipedia)
Substack: Disrupting traditional publishing and media industries (like blogs, newsrooms, Medium)
Grab/Uber: Disrupting urban transportation and logistics (like taxis, car rentals, delivery services)
Netflix: Disrupting cable TV and physical media (like Blockbuster, traditional broadcasting)
Airbnb: Disrupting the hotel and accommodation industry (like traditional hotels, travel agencies)
Amazon: Disrupting physical retail (like Walmart, local stores, Sears)
When these disruptors change the way industries operate, they themselves become new giants in their respective fields, creating opportunities for future emerging players to disrupt them again.
Autonomous Economy
In the autonomous economy, AI agents (Agentic AI) fundamentally change the way industries operate. These AI agents act as a digital workforce, capable of proactively completing tasks. Autonomous AI interfaces are now very common, significantly reducing user time investment while enhancing productivity. This shift makes goods and services more efficient, especially in industries where humans perform repetitive tasks, as AI and AI agents can significantly lower costs and improve efficiency.
In the Web2 era, the best incubation platform and distribution network for showcasing AI and AI agent applications was ++@ycombinator++, particularly in recent batches of projects.
Midship: Using AI to scale financial auditing work
Cuckoo: Providing real-time AI translation for global sales, marketing, and support
Tempo: Helping designers and developers collaborate for 10x product delivery speed
Ascend: AI-based financial statement analysis platform
As large language models (LLMs) continue to improve, AI capabilities are enhanced, more industries are disrupted, and an increasing number of roles and responsibilities are augmented or enhanced in productivity (not yet fully replaced).
Consumer AI in Web3 is Brewing
In the Web2 era, Y Combinator served as the primary distribution network, incubating and promoting many high-quality AI startups. In the Web3 space, ++@virtuals_io++ is playing a similar role through the Agent Commerce Protocol (ACP). ACP is an open standard for commercial collaboration between multiple agents (AI agents), allowing these agents to invoke services, negotiate prices, execute tasks, and provide evaluations.
This mechanism gives rise to the Web3-driven Agentic Economy, where agents collaborate to create greater value for users. Autonomous hedge funds and autonomous media companies will be the first experimental projects of ACP, launching this entirely new economic system.
Trillion-Dollar Opportunity
As ++@sequoia++ stated:
"The core of cloud transformation is Software as a Service (SaaS). Software companies are transforming into cloud service providers, creating a market opportunity worth $350 billion. Thanks to Agentic Reasoning, the core of AI transformation is Service-as-a-Software. Software companies are turning labor into software. This means the addressable market is no longer the software market, but the service market worth trillions of dollars."
Now, imagine the AI agent economy driven by Web3 capturing just a small portion of this approximately $10 trillion service market through crypto-native use cases (like trading, yield farming, i.e., crypto investments) and leveraging token incentives for accelerated growth—this represents a massive opportunity.
Source: Sequoia
Distribution Layer = Key to Victory
In the transition to the Agentic Economy, distribution networks/coordinating layers will become the biggest beneficiaries. This is because crypto tokens have become central to the Web3 AI monetization model: users need to stake, burn, or hold tokens to access core agent products or use cases; tokens serve as the core currency for paying computational resources and/or service fees.
This demand for tokens, along with the natural alignment of incentives between long-term supporters of projects and the projects themselves, means there will always be trading volume to capture, whether on decentralized exchanges (DEX) or on a token launch platform. The distribution layer that can coordinate the autonomous economy and capture this trading volume will become a top player in this field, capturing a significant portion of the approximately $10 trillion market.
Welcome to the dawn of the Web3 autonomous economy. The future is here, bold and free—this is the era of the autonomous rise of Web3.