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Entrepreneur and former presidential candidate Andrew Yang has a theory about where the next wave of startup opportunity lies, and it starts with a question most founders arenât asking: what if the business model was giving money back instead of extracting it?
Yang was inspired by Mark Cuban. Not by his wealth, or his celebrity, but by Cost Plus Drugs â Cubanâs startup that sells pharmaceuticals at cost. Yang made a list.
âHousing, education, food, fuel, transportation, media, and wireless,â Yang told TechCrunch on a recent episode of Equity . âThe things we all spend money on.â
He picked wireless and last September launched Nobile Mobile , a new mobile virtual network operator that provides cell service for a fraction of what traditional carriers charge and gives customers money back if they use less data.
As AI threatens to compress wages and displace workers, Yang sees a business opportunity in bringing down the cost of living. Cost Plus Drugs, Noble Mobile, dumb phone makers like Light Phone , and even online grocery store Misfits Markets are early examples of an emerging business category where the startupâs value proposition is the margin it gives back to the customer.
âAI is going to suck up a lot of the value and the jobs, and then Americans are going to look up and say, âHow do I meet basic needs?ââ Yang said. He believes meeting peopleâs needs âless expensivelyâ is âa very rich vein of opportunity.â
That instinct didnât emerge from nowhere. Yang first launched himself into the public eye during his 2020 presidential campaign, during which he advocated for Universal Basic Income as a means of combating AI-related workforce displacement and wealth concentration. The campaign didnât succeed but the thesis has only grown more relevant.
Yang is still an advocate for UBI, arguing that the value generated by AI companies needs to be redistributed into the hands of the average American. But whether the government will be the vehicle for that redistribution, or whether it will just use any collected wealth to âplug a hole and do something not terribly productive,â Yang is less certain.
âThere is room for a direct connection between the money and the people,â he said.
Thatâs where the market comes in. Where policy fails, Yang argues, market incentives can step in. Noble Mobile is his attempt to prove the point. Since its launch last September, the company has grown to âthousands and thousandsâ of customers and is bringing in âmillions in revenue.â
âWeâre unit profitable per customer, but we just share the profits with our subscribers with the idea that itâll make you happy, youâll stay around, and maybe youâll tell your friends and family,â Yang said.
The pitch is simple. Yang noted that the average monthly savings of $50, invested and compounded over 40 years, could amount to $24,000 â enough for a retirement down payment. And in this economy, who isnât thinking about little ways they can upgrade their personal finance?
Whether investors will share that enthusiasm is another question entirely. Even if the opportunity is real, capital is concentrated heavily in AI right now, while consumer-facing businesses with thin margins and a social mission are a hard sell.
âI had at least one investor say to me around Noble Mobile, âLove you, Andrew, want to work with you â if you could just make this an AI company, weâll invest,ââ Yang said.
The tide might be changing, though, simply because even the most wealthy, extractive companies need an economy in which consumers have enough buying power to purchase their products.
âThe value being concentrated in the hands of a handful of folks and firms is just bad for everybody,â he said. âThere are some folks I know in Silicon Valley who are open to that for a variety of reasonsâŠ[like] they just donât want to have to hire private security.â
Yang encouraged founders and investors to take on problems theyâre passionate about and find a way to build a valuable enterprise on top of it.
âThink bigger and more broadly about trying to tackle problems and donât subscribe so much to groupthink, because there are some valuable opportunities out there,â he said.
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Rebecca Bellan is a senior reporter at TechCrunch where she covers the business, policy, and emerging trends shaping artificial intelligence. Her work has also appeared in Forbes, Bloomberg, The Atlantic, The Daily Beast, and other publications.
You can contact or verify outreach from Rebecca by emailing rebecca.bellan@techcrunch.com or via encrypted message at rebeccabellan.491 on Signal.
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