Equity
Equity
TechCrunch, Rebecca Bellan, Kirsten Korosec, Anthony Ha, Sean O'Kane, Theresa Loconsolo
Investing in the consumer AI products OpenAI ‘won’t want to kill’
31 minutes Posted Jan 7, 2026 at 5:40 pm.
Introduction
Why founders are excited about consumer again
The moat against OpenAI: Managing real humans
Apps as disposable as Word docs
Social media in the AI era
Meta Ray-Bans and why wearables are actually good
Stablecoins and consumer fintech opportunities
M&A predictions for 2026
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Show notes
Vanessa Larco, partner at Premise and former partner at NEA, thinks 2026 will finally be the year of consumer AI. 
Larco, who's been investing in consumer and prosumer for years, thinks we're about to see a shift in how consumers spend time online, with AI powering “concierge-like” services. The question is, will legacy consumer products like WebMD and TripAdvisor continue to exist as standalone apps, or will they just get absorbed into ChatGPT or Meta AI? And where can startups carve out an AI-powered niche for themselves? 
Today on TechCrunch's Equity podcast, Rebecca Bellan sat down with Larco to talk about why consumer is back, what OpenAI won't kill, and where the real opportunities are hiding. 
Listen to the full episode to hear about: 
Why Larco thinks OpenAI won't build marketplace businesses that require managing real humans. 
Larco’s take on "disposable software" and why AI apps “should be treated like Word docs.” 
How Meta Ray-Ban smart glasses turned Larco into a believer in voice interfaces (and why she thinks screens are optional for most tasks). 
More predictions for 2026, including another huge year for M&A. 
What new business models stablecoins could unlock.  
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