The Cliché-Industrial Complex: Quantum's Long March from Lab to Boardroom
Anthropic Claude helps write the common clichés about the evolution of quantum computing
Image credit: Google Gemini
WARNING: Use of AI ahead. Run away now if you wish.
Ok, I admit it. I should have been doing something else, but I was wondering if Anthropic Claude could help generate the usual boring, overused statements about the commercialization of quantum computing. With some nudging and iteration from me, here are some good ones.
Feel free to use them if you don’t have anything else to say. Be sure to credit Claude and check the veracity of each.
Quantum is moving from the quantum lab to commercialization.
Quantum is no longer a moonshot — it’s a roadmap.
Quantum computing is shifting from theoretical promise to practical reality.
Quantum is graduating from physics experiment to business tool.
Once confined to university basements, quantum computers are heading for the boardroom.
Quantum is leaving the ivory tower and entering the boardroom.
What started in physics labs is now showing up on earnings calls.
Quantum computing is making the leap from peer-reviewed papers to product roadmaps.
The PhDs have done their part — now it’s the CFOs’ turn.
Quantum is trading lab coats for business suits.
From basement servers to boardroom slide decks, quantum has arrived.
Quantum computing is graduating from academic curiosity to commercial necessity.
The conversation has shifted from “can we build it” to “how do we sell it.”
Quantum’s research phase is winding down; its commercial phase is winding up.
Universities proved the concept. Now industry wants the payoff.
Quantum computing is exiting the lab and entering the enterprise.
What was once a grant proposal is now a business case.
The lab coats are stepping aside for the pitch decks.
Quantum is moving down the hall — from the physics department to the C-suite.
Commercialization is quantum’s next experiment, and the stakes are higher than ever.
Sutor Group Intelligence and Advisory
Dr. Bob Sutor is CEO and Founder of Sutor Group Intelligence and Advisory. Drawing on more than four decades of experience across startups and large corporations, Sutor Group advises Deep Tech startups, enterprises, governments, and investors on quantum technologies and other emerging fields, pairing market insight with deep technical expertise.
The firm shares its work through client engagements, seminars, reports, newsletters, books, media appearances, and speaking and panel moderation at leading industry conferences and client events.
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