Jensen Huang just called OpenClaw "the most important software in history."
Jensen Huang just called OpenClaw "the most important software in history."
250,000 GitHub stars in weeks. NVIDIA built an enterprise platform on top of it. Tencent wired it into WeChat.
But here's what nobody at GTC mentioned:
80% of what makes your product worth buying lives in people's heads, not your systems.
Your pricing logic. Your exception handling. The "oh, talk to Sarah about that" tribal knowledge.
AI agents can't read any of it.
And the companies that figure this out first? They're not building chatbots. They're rebuilding their transactional infrastructure so that agents can discover, evaluate, and buy what they sell. No human translating.
This isn't an API problem. It's a data quality problem that goes all the way down the stack.
Here's a 30-second diagnostic:
Could a new employee find your pricing, place an order, and handle a return using only your systems? No phone calls, no "ask Jennifer"?
If not, an AI agent can't either. And your competitor's customers are about to start sending agents to shop for them.
What's the one thing in your business that only works because someone specific knows how it works?