Generative media is no longer a curiosity on the edges of product roadmaps—it’s fast becoming a core capability. Watching one company sprint from uncertainty to undeniable traction reminded me how much a decisive pivot, a developer-first brand, and ruthless focus can bend a growth curve. This is a story about finding product-market fit in real time, scaling with intention, and staying lean while the category accelerates beneath your feet.
Gorkem Yurtseven is the co-founder and CEO of fal, the generative media platform powering the next wave of image, video, and audio applications. In less than two years, fal has scaled from $2M to over $100M in ARR, serving over 2 million developers and more than 300 enterprises, including Adobe, Canva, and Shopify. In this conversation, Gorkem shares the inside story of fal’s pivot into explosive growth, the technical and cultural philosophies driving its success, and his predictions for the future of AI-generated media.
What stood out to me first was the clarity of the pivot: “How fal pivoted from data infrastructure to generative inference.” The hardest decisions often feel like abandonment—of code, roadmap, and even identity—but the right pivot reframes everything around a higher-signal customer need. That decision, described as “The hardest decision that saved the company,” unlocked a new trajectory and set a crisp north star for the team.
Equally important was the market intuition. As they put it, “Why ‘generative media’ is a greenfield new market.” Greenfield means pattern-breaking strategy: prioritize outcomes over parity, embrace new workflows rather than retrofit old ones, and measure value in quality, latency, and unit economics—not just features. In my experience, this is where product teams win or lose: you either build the new default or get trapped perfecting the old one.
fal’s “explosive year” wasn’t luck; it was systems thinking applied to a developer platform. The team stayed small—”lean <50-person team” and “Staying nimble as a 45-person company”—and built a brand that feels genuinely for builders: “Building a brand that resonates with developers.” That shows up in everything from docs and SDKs to the cultural quirks that scale signal, like “Why fal has 500 Slack channels.” Velocity and clarity compound when communication is designed for ownership.
Early traction came from sharp use cases and fast feedback loops. I loved the transition arc from “The early adopters of the first fal product” to “The transition from toy to tool.” In a new category, the fastest path to durable usage is making something delightful and then relentlessly hardening it for production: uptime targets, deterministic APIs, transparent pricing, and repeatable performance. That’s how you move from demos to dependable workflows.
The timing call is bold and specific: “Why 2025 is the year of AI-generated video” and “Predicting AI-generated film in 2027.” If you build in gen AI, this matters. Video will force teams to optimize for cost per second, temporal coherence, and developer ergonomics across long-running jobs. The winners will combine model choice (OpenAI, Anthropic, Google DeepMind, Stability AI; “Stable Diffusion XL (SDXL)”, “Sora”, “DALL-E”, “LLaMA”) with world-class inference, smart caching, and autoscaling that feels invisible to the developer.
On the go-to-market side, I see a masterclass in founder-led GTM and developer evangelism. “Competing in a fast-moving, fragmented market” requires sharp messaging and distinctive ideas. The story behind “GPU Rich / GPU Poor” is a perfect example: a memorable narrative that encodes a real infrastructure advantage. Pair that with “fal’s greatest optimization wins” and you get a brand promise rooted in measurable performance, not just clever copy.
Culture and team design are the force multipliers. “How to build a world-class team” and “fal’s unique hiring philosophy” emphasize high-slope talent, ownership, and speed over headcount. The result is a product org that ships, learns, and iterates without bureaucratic drag. For technical founders, “Learning sales as a technical founder” is a reminder that the best sales motion often emerges from the same instincts as great product discovery: ask better questions, observe real workflows, and sell through outcomes.
Here’s how I translate these lessons into a practical playbook for product leaders working in gen ai and developer platforms: double down on developer experience (time-to-first-output, clear pricing, robust SDKs), make latency and reliability your product features, sequence the roadmap from delightful demos to dependable production tools, and stay lean enough to pivot as models and use cases evolve. Above all, treat “Why generative media is a greenfield market” as a call to invent the defaults others will copy.
Looking ahead, the path is clear: as AI-generated video normalizes in 2025 and professional-grade content follows by 2027, the products that win will combine inference excellence with a brand developers trust. If you’re building in this space, now is the moment to ship fast, optimize relentlessly, and meet creators and developers where they already work.












Leave a Reply