51 comments

  • hackingonempty 2 hours ago

    This is like saying Twitter isn't worth much because every web framework tutorial produces a "Twitter clone."

    • jameslk an hour ago

      From TFA:

      “We are leveraging vibecoding to show what a software company can and can’t do, to understand where it fits in the value chain and to understand whether it is the actual code that is the defensible part of the business or something else,”

    • Thrymr 2 hours ago

      Well, Twitter isn't worth much, or at least not what Elon paid for it in 2022, it just carries on like a zombie under a different name and investors got bailed out by being rolled into xAI and then the SpaceX IPO.

      Though your point that Twitter's value was never in the code stands.

      • 2 hours ago
        [deleted]
    • citizenpaul an hour ago

      IDK. The internet is full of examples of platform max exodus's. This may actually be a killer idea that will finally challenge the tech oligarchy power. I think we are in for a turbulent future. The FANNG/MANGO companies have essentially never had any real challenge to their dominace. We are about to enter an era where they will be challenged for the first time. I don't think they will be nice about it and we will see their true non altruistic colors. Especially Google and Apple which have lost their halos but are still considered "good actors" by many.

    • paul7986 an hour ago

      I CALL FOR ANTIARCHY AGAINST AI!

      ALL PROGRAMMERS and VIBE CODERS use AI against itself ... vibe code systems that forces AI to pay all of humans for our content! Without our content AI is irrelevant! Why are we giving our content/souls to it freely now so it thrives and we do not??

      • jujube3 an hour ago

        Sir, this is a Wendy's.

        • paul7986 an hour ago

          Could be McDonalds but AntiArchy against AI starts somewhere and who cares if you think what i typed is crazy present day. It won't be in time!

  • mmarian 4 hours ago

    Hard to see it'll help them much. There's so many other aspects to a successful software business vs just ease of build.

    • jameslk 43 minutes ago

      That's the point of why they're doing it. From TFA:

      "Private equity investors are turning to AI-generated replicas of software to assess whether acquisition targets have a competitive advantage

      [...]

      'We are leveraging vibecoding to show what a software company can and can’t do, to understand where it fits in the value chain and to understand whether it is the actual code that is the defensible part of the business or something else,'"

      • mmarian 20 minutes ago

        I honestly can't think of how to reply to your comment without repeating what I said.

        • jameslk 16 minutes ago

          I honestly can't think of a reason why you bothered say it, given that the quote from TFA addresses it

    • alistairSH 3 hours ago

      Customer already pay management consultancies for software - certainly BAH does a bunch of that here in DC (some .gov, some private sector).

      • alephnerd 2 hours ago

        > management consultancies for software...

        Management/Strategy Consulting is different from Implementation Consulting (eg. BAH building and operating a .gov site).

        • alistairSH 2 hours ago

          Sure, and Bain, like BAH, has a software consulting practice. Many of the big consultancies do.

          • alephnerd 2 hours ago

            My point is, if you are going to use terminology then use terminology correctly. The signal to noise ratio on HN is already bad enough as it is.

            Implementation Consulting is always a separate practice under a seprate set of partners and leadership from Strategy Consulting.

            Also, BAH doesn't really do Management Consulting anymore.

            What Bain is doing is basically testing whether the valuation of acquisition targets actually makes sense or not, which is different from what you are talking about.

  • xg15 2 hours ago

    Somewhat fitting that we just got the Backrooms movie which is about making Uncanny Valley copies of locations (and people) and here we have Uncanny Valley copies of software...

  • rich_sasha 3 hours ago

    Is the future of software really vibe coded by management consultants..?

    • alistairSH 3 hours ago

      Basic CRUD apps? Sure, why not.

      Anything substantially new will still require an engineer in the loop. Specifically, if a new design pattern, archtecture, etc is required. AI can only build on its training material - it can't yet have original thoughts.

      • rich_sasha 2 hours ago

        I can still think of many reasons why not.

        • an hour ago
          [deleted]
      • budsniffer952 2 hours ago

        >AI can only build on its training material - it can't yet have original thoughts.

        Oh, so it's only good for 99.9999% of all software?

        And people will say things like, "it's limited by training data" without any mention of just how VAST that data is.

        While you're here, can you give us some "original thoughts" to demonstrate your ability over Claude?

    • vitorsr an hour ago

      I am not sure it is the management consulting partners or their associates that are doing the vibe coding.

      The more likely scenario is that they "consume" the output of designated offshore teams.

    • danesparza 3 hours ago

      Software consulting has been around for a very long time. Decades.

      It has always been overpriced and had huge margins.

      I think what management consultants are really afraid of is being replaced. By AI.

      • PLenz 2 hours ago

        Big management consulting firms real value prop is two-fold 1) (value to it's employees) networking for the corporate leadership class when young and 2) (value to outside companies) blame insurance, you can always blame them for why something didn't work

      • moregrist 2 hours ago

        > It has always been overpriced and had huge margins.

        This is the engineer’s take on things. I am entirely sympathetic to it.

        I also think it missed a lot of what management values in consulting. At its best, you can offload a lot of things unrelated to your business to people who are experts. At its worst, you’ve offloaded the blame to a group of over-worked twenty-something’s with impressive degrees who have no idea what they’re doing, but who sound really fucking confident about it.

        Can an internal team do it better? Probably. Will they be cheaper? Probably. Will they assuage management’s anxieties and deflect some/all of the blame? Nope, not at all.

        • woah an hour ago

          I did some software consulting years ago. Were we overpriced? Probably. But I also saw why we were brought in:

          - A TDD loop where the Indian QA team played the role of the tests. The engineers would yeet some broken code at the end of the day, the poor QA testers would click through all the broken interfaces, and then the engineers would fix it the next day.

          - A release process that was so slow and hellish that everyone just went to the DBA to have him add a stored procedure to implement their feature. He could get it in for you the next day.

          - A frontend framework discussed in hushed tones, being built by a mysterious monk-like engineer, which was going to be the client's big secret weapon. In reality it was a terrible version of React built on top of jQuery.

          - A core in-group of backend devs (most of these guys had advanced degrees for some reason), who would stay late every Friday, going through heroics to do a release of the client's email-templating app. There would be then be lots of back-slapping and congratulations the next Monday for these geniuses who were keeping the business afloat.

          - "when in doubt, set timeout". They didn't know about callbacks

          Usually consultants are brought in when upper management can tell that there is something very wrong and they can't fix it within the chain of command of their full-time staff.

        • budsniffer952 an hour ago

          Ah yes, the old trope of "consultants are only there to take the blame". Sure.

          Having done a stint in consulting, most internal software teams are useless, that's why these companies hire outsiders. They are sick of having to deal with stubborn teams who think they know everything, and refuse to change. You can see that mentality in these threads.

    • bla15e 2 hours ago

      The future of software is the past of software is the future of software - ping pong between in-housed money furnaces and out-sourced predators.

      A quick addendum: The in-housed money furnace can produce material to reinforce and extend the foundations of information technology

    • jameslk an hour ago

      In the article, they explain the goal of vibe coding prototypes is not to rebuild software, but to test the defensibility of businesses based on their software so they can decide whether to acquire them or not

    • dgellow 3 hours ago

      it's not, no, but some groups will try. Paying for corporate software is mostly about delegating responsibility

    • rectang 2 hours ago

      "Make my web app secure."

      • budsniffer952 an hour ago

        In case you've had your head in the sand for the past 6 months, AI is finding vulnerabilities in all kinds of software written by humans.

        So, yes, asking an AI to secure your app is going to be much better than what the average dev churns out.

        • rectang an hour ago

          > AI is finding vulnerabilities in all kinds of software written by humans.

          I'm aware — I've used LLMs to find vulnerabilities, myself. But it doesn't follow that because AI can find them that AI can find the optimal fix, because fixing vulnerabilities often involves tradeoffs.

          Also, can we please have a civil discussion?

  • su8898 3 hours ago

    If only Bain could use their AI skills to fix their website. It's a horrible and convoluted mess!

    • Jensson 2 hours ago

      How would the AI fix fix that?

    • 2 hours ago
      [deleted]
  • RugnirViking 3 hours ago

    the ease of making a prototype is not at all related to the ease of productising/releasing/bringing to market and that, in turn, is not at all related to the ease of maintenence/maturization/scaling.

    You didn't even want the same kind of guy or team doing each one before ai. Turns out, AI is great at prototyping, ok at productizing and terrible at maintenence and scaling

    • alephnerd 2 hours ago

      The point about prototyping and vibecoding in this manner is to wargame and think about workflows and whether or not they are defensible.

      A product where the secret sauce is basically a distribution play is going to need a different strategy and demand a different valuation compared to a product where the platform itself is successfully monetizing on a workflow.

  • etchalon 2 hours ago

    This seems incredibly logical if the application is claiming its IP has value without accounts/revenue that justify that value.

  • peder 3 hours ago

    I mean, this is just basic smart investing today. Software is now very easily replicable, and you wouldn't want to invest in software that has absolutely no moat.

    At a minimum, this gives Bain more leverage when negotiating with these companies.

    • claytongulick 2 hours ago

      > Software is now very easily replicable

      How?

      Do you mean by AI? I haven't seen any evidence of this.

      It was always possible to get code generated at large volumes for low cost (offshore/outsource market) but we didn't see this upend or replace many (if any) software companies. In my experience it had the opposite effect - companies that replaced talented internal teams ended up suffering.

      LLM generated code is similar, but arguably more expensive and lower quality.

      We don't see LLM generated product replacement at scale because code generation is a problem, but it's not the only problem. Low quality can kill a product, but high quality doesn't guarantee success.

      There's an entire ecosystem around a successful software offering. An ecosystem that depends on adequately functioning code.

      LLMs may be useful for certain tasks (...maybe... - we've always had good options for repetitive code generation) but I certainly wouldn't describe it as "very easily replicable".

      • realityfactchex an hour ago

        >> > Software is now very easily replicable

        > any evidence of this.

        "Any evidence" you say? I think something has moved.

        As of Autumn/Winter 2025, I can say "Here's a complete enough spec of what I want cloned. Crank on it for a few hours. Give me the clone site as I specified." And frontier agentic tooling does a hands-off YOLO job really well. (Notice: I set it up with good specs/rules to scaffold.) Cost maybe an hour of my time to set up/scaffold, and 3 hours cranking on its own, on a $20 or $60/mo sub.

        I think taking the same problem to an "offshore house" (or even Fiverr or whatever) would probably easily cost 10-100x more, and quite possibly with worse (less reusable or less best-practices code quality or less functional or less clean) output overall.

        So I think your OVERALL point may stand. I'm just nitpicking the specific aspect quoted above, and maybe to some degree the aspect of

        > "LLM generated code is similar, but arguably more expensive and lower quality"

        Which to be fair obviously depends on what code one is comparing.

        I used to say "nah, it can't replicate apps that well by itself", but then I tried it (on the advice of a fellow commenter here on HN), and was surprised myself.

        • claytongulick an hour ago

          I agree with your nitpick, I think.

          If your argument is that LLMs are more effective and less costly than typical low-quality outsourced code, I generally agree with that, depending on the details.

          For prototype/POC stuff, absolutely.

          For long term deployable product stuff that needs to be maintained, supported with SLAs etc... eh, like everything, it depends on the people/team.

          I've been leading dev teams for around 25 years, and I tend to think in terms of total cost of code.

          Cognitive debt is a real thing. The cost of a developer that leaves the team, and the struggle to have someone take over their work is real.

          With LLMs you have all this hidden cost, plus no "theory of mind", which makes the cognitive debt much worse.

          Combine that with atrophied skills, subtle bugs, architecture facepalms, security issues, etc... and the total cost of LLM generated code is a lot higher than just a subscription price.

      • budsniffer952 an hour ago

        Imagine saying with a straight face "we've always had code generation tools like LLMs".

        • claytongulick an hour ago

          Yes, we have, though that wasn't my point - I was comparing LLMs to offshore development.

          But since you bring it up, those of us that have been around a while have used many code generation tools that took care of tedious work like model creation, forms, validation, class creation, CRUD, component creation, project skeletons, starter templates, visual design tools that generate code, etc... etc... basically most of the stuff that LLMs are good at. Simple things that are tedious and don't require much thought - the sorts of things that statistical pattern matchers like LLMs are good at.

          The rest of it, the stuff that requires thoughtful architecture and reasoning is where LLMs fall flat and mostly end up costing time. The research supports this.

          So yep, my face is indeed quite straight.

  • 5 hours ago
    [deleted]
  • xnx 2 hours ago

    Very good idea. For every company that is valuable because of software + knowledge + service + loyal customers there are a dozen that only exist because of weak competition and inertia.

    Easy to imagine there are a lot of software products that could be cloned and out-competed by taking 15% profit margin instead of 50%.

    • RIMR an hour ago

      So a dedicated team of engineers creates a functional product, and you plagiarize it so you can have all the profit for yourself?

      Only a "good idea" if you're a thief with no original ideas.

      • xnx 37 minutes ago

        I didn't invent capitalism.