OpenAI just released GPT-4o Mini, their most cost-efficient small model to date.
This new offering isn't just another incremental improvement—it's a game-changer.
That’s because it’s both more powerful than previous models. And much cheaper than them.
First, the part about being more powerful:
The model outperforms GPT-4 on certain tasks. It supports both text and vision inputs in its API, with plans to expand to audio and video. And it boasts a context window of 128,000 tokens.
Second, the part about being much cheaper:
GPT-4o Mini is priced at just 15 cents per million input tokens and 60 cents per million output tokens, which makes it an order of magnitude more affordable than previous frontier models and 60%+ cheaper than GPT-3.5 Turbo.
In other words, you now get way more intelligence for way less money—an overall industry trend that is reshaping business as we know it.
What does this mean for companies? For knowledge workers?
I got the scoop from Marketing AI Institute founder and CEO Paul Roetzer on Episode 106 of The Artificial Intelligence Show podcast.
Roetzer sees GPT-4o Mini as part of a broader trend: "Intelligence rises, costs fall." Models are consistently getting smarter and cost less to deploy, which accelerates the building of even more intelligent systems.
That could result, Roetzer says, in models that are 10-100X smarter than the technology we use today in just a few short years, leading to:
Sam Altman, OpenAI's CEO, put the progress in stark terms in a post on X about GPT-4o Mini:
The release of GPT-4o Mini is more than just a new product launch—it's a glimpse into the future of AI.
Roetzer says that as these models continue to improve in capability while decreasing in cost, we're likely to see:
For business leaders, the trendline is clear:
The AI revolution is accelerating, the barriers to entry are lower than ever, and the pace of AI advancement shows no sign of slowing down.
“That’s a weird dynamic to be planning for the future when intelligence seems to be everywhere and the cost of it is dramatically plummeting,” says Roetzer.
In other words, buckle up—the ride is just beginning.