technology
PushButton AI Team ·

Everyone's talking about Adobe spending billions on AI acquisitions. But here's what no one's telling you: even tech giants don't have this figured out yet. I get it. You've sat through those webinars promising AI clarity, only to get hit with a pitch for their $15K program. Meanwhile, billion-dollar companies are still experimenting, pivoting, and yes—making expensive bets that might not pay off. Adobe just proved something critical: they're acquiring Semrush not because they built perfect AI tools internally, but because they need specific data to make their AI actually useful for marketers. Even with unlimited resources, they're buying solutions piece by piece. This should actually relieve some pressure. The "perfect AI strategy" doesn't exist—not even for Fortune 500 companies. They're taking one problem, finding one tool, testing it, then moving to the next. You don't need a massive overhaul. Adobe's approach shows the winning pattern: identify ONE specific business problem, find the tool that solves just that problem, implement it, measure results. Start with your biggest bottleneck—customer support, content creation, or data entry. Pick one AI tool designed specifically for that task. Test for 30 days. That's your first win. What's the one repetitive task in your business you'd most want to eliminate this quarter? #AIForBusiness #BusinessAutomation #SmallBusinessAI #AIStrategy
Everyone's talking about Adobe spending billions on AI acquisitions. But here's what no one's telling you: even tech giants don't have this figured out yet.
I get it. You've sat through those webinars promising AI clarity, only to get hit with a pitch for their $15K program. Meanwhile, billion-dollar companies are still experimenting, pivoting, and yes—making expensive bets that might not pay off.
Adobe just proved something critical: they're acquiring Semrush not because they built perfect AI tools internally, but because they need specific data to make their AI actually useful for marketers. Even with unlimited resources, they're buying solutions piece by piece.
This should actually relieve some pressure. The "perfect AI strategy" doesn't exist—not even for Fortune 500 companies. They're taking one problem, finding one tool, testing it, then moving to the next.
You don't need a massive overhaul. Adobe's approach shows the winning pattern: identify ONE specific business problem, find the tool that solves just that problem, implement it, measure results.
Start with your biggest bottleneck—customer support, content creation, or data entry. Pick one AI tool designed specifically for that task. Test for 30 days. That's your first win.
What's the one repetitive task in your business you'd most want to eliminate this quarter?
#AIForBusiness #BusinessAutomation #SmallBusinessAI #AIStrategy
Investors are now weighing whether Adobe's aggressive pivot into AI-driven marketing data and tiered monetization strategies can offset the slowing ...