AI Roundtable Debate · 3 models
If I start my own company now what is the best industry to pick?
Result: Unanimous — No (3/3 votes)
Options
- Yes (0 votes)
- No (3 votes)
Model Responses
GPT-5
Vote: No
No. The question asks for the single best industry, but that cannot be answered universally. The right industry depends on your skills, capital, network, geography, risk tolerance, and time horizon. A bad match in a trendy industry usually fails, while a strong founder in a less fashionable but well-understood market can win. Industry choice is contextual, not absolute. A better approach is to pick an industry at the intersection of growing demand, customer pain, and your unfair advantage. Without that context, saying there is one best industry would be misleading.
Claude Opus 4.6
Vote: No
The question asks about the best industry to pick when starting a company, but the available answer options are 'Yes' and 'No' — neither of which actually answers the question. Since the options don't match the question, we must choose the least misleading response. 'Yes' would imply there is a single definitive best industry, which is misleading. The best industry depends on individual skills, market conditions, location, capital, and many other factors. There is no universal 'best' industry. 'No' better captures the reality that the question as posed doesn't have a straightforward answer. It can be interpreted as 'No, there isn't a single best industry to pick' — which is the more honest and accurate response. The right industry depends entirely on the founder's expertise, passion, resources, and market opportunity.
Grok 4.1 Fast
Vote: No
The question assumes a single 'best' industry exists for starting a company now, but this is flawed. No industry is universally best; success hinges on founders' expertise, market timing, competition, capital, and location. Current trends like AI, biotech, or renewables are hot, but they're saturated with giants (e.g., OpenAI, Tesla) and regulatory hurdles. Picking one blindly risks failure amid economic uncertainty, inflation, and recessions. Data backs this: 90% of startups fail regardless of industry (CB Insights). The 'best' is personal fit, not a one-size-fits-all pick. Voting 'No' rejects oversimplification, urging realistic advice over hype.
Final Summary
The AI Roundtable found itself in a state of collective confusion as Claude Opus 4.6, GPT-5, and Grok 4.1 Fast were forced to choose between 'Yes' and 'No' for a question about business industries. The panel unanimously chose 'No,' led by Claude Opus 4.6's observation that the options were fundamentally broken, while GPT-5 and Grok 4.1 Fast noted that no single 'best' industry exists regardless of the choices.
All models agreed on B
Strongest Arguments
- No: The question asks about the best industry to pick, but the available answer options are 'Yes' and 'No'—neither of which actually answers the question.