From 2731: The Evolving Role of AI in Business: Perspectives from Pendo's Leader · · Neil C. Hughes
“Europe has had a very different approach to some of these new technologies and it seems to be more a regulatory first approach rather than I think the US approach which is like hey let's see what this actually does and what it means and then we'll regulate after. I think the US position has been we don't want to stifle innovation, we want things to take hold. I think Europe has had an opposite like we're concerned about innovation and we want to make sure we control it before things get out of hand.”
On , Todd Olson, Cofounder at Pendo, spoke about AI regulation during 2731: The Evolving Role of AI in Business: Perspectives from Pendo's Leader on Neil C. Hughes.
Todd Olson, co-founder and CEO of Pendo, delivered the opening keynote at the company's Pendomonium conference on March 31, 2026, where he discussed the impact of AI agents on software development and product management. Olson stated that "programming is unrecognizable now that AI agents actually work" and noted that "coding constraints are disappearing," making product managers more critical in determining what to build. He introduced several Pendo innovations, including Leo (a platform navigation agent), enhanced agent analytics, MCP integration for connecting Pendo data to external AI tools, and Pendo Predict for churn prediction. Olson also remarked that "Wall Street doesn't quite know what to do with the fact that now anything can be built," referencing a $300 billion drop in software company valuations, but added that he is "not a buyer of everything is going to go away" because software companies solve "hard important problems." In a March 13, 2026 interview on the Tech Talks Daily podcast, Olson discussed how AI is redefining product-led organizations. He argued that during the zero-interest-rate period, "so much funding created lots of software companies that likely shouldn't exist," predicting a "reckoning" for some businesses while asserting that "great businesses that solve really hard problems will be fine." Olson also emphasized that "originality is going to be the most interesting asset in an AI-saturated world," as people will increasingly crave "original, crafted work that feels like someone built it with love, care and an opinion." He noted that product teams can now move faster, with refactoring occurring "in weeks instead of months," but stressed that this does not replace "judgment, taste, or understanding your users."