The AI starter pack trend is taking over LinkedIn and TikTok

What’s in your office starter pack? La Colombe cold brew and a New Yorker subscription? Bose headphones and Brooks Brothers?

Thanks to the latest ChatGPT trend making the rounds, you can now find out. By uploading a few photos and using a specific prompt, OpenAI’s GPT-4o image generator will spit out a personalized action figure or Barbie box in your likeness—complete with miniature accessories and sealed in plastic.

In the past week, the trend has started popping up across TikTok, X, and—where trends go to die—Facebook and LinkedIn.

“The Strategic Data & AI Consultant Starter Pack – Now in limited-edition blister packaging,” one LinkedIn user wrote alongside their post. “Unleash Your Inner Leader: The ‘Passion-Driven AI Impact’ Starter Pack!” wrote another.

A marketing agency in Texas called it “a cute way to re-introduce yourself to your audience, re-introduce your employees, or even make an ‘action figure,’ (or a few ‘action figures,’) of what your ideal target audience/consumer looks like.” Brands like Starbucks and NYX Cosmetics have also jumped on the trend. Even Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene posted her own AI-generated figure, complete with Bible and gavel.

The Congresswoman MTG Starter Kit ✨
If I was a doll!
I love all my accessories, including my Bible and gavel for DOGE Committee chair! pic.twitter.com/2fEWYH1Ubt

— Marjorie Taylor Greene 🇺🇸 (@mtgreenee) April 10, 2025

As with other recent AI trends, reception has been mixed. “People on LinkedIn turning themselves into cheap, plastic, replaceable products is the least surprising thing,” one X user posted. “Can we please stop mass using AI to create social media trends (for example, the action figure trend happening rn)?” another wrote.

People on LinkedIn turning themselves into cheap, plastic, replaceable products is the least surprising thing.

— akreon (@_akreon_) April 10, 2025

The counter-hashtag #StarterPackNoAI quickly began circulating among creatives pushing back against what they see as the erosion of artistic labor. The starter pack trend follows closely on the heels of the controversial Studio Ghibli AI trend, which sparked debate over whether OpenAI was unfairly using the work of artists, including Studio Ghibli’s Hayao Miyazaki.

Environmental and cultural concerns aside, some users simply hate to see the TikTokification of LinkedIn.

“Went over to LinkedIn for a break from tariff world is ending doomscrolling. Got a feed full of ‘I made myself an action figure,’” another X user complained. “Take me back doomscrollers.”


https://www.fastcompany.com/91318427/the-ai-starter-pack-trend-is-taking-over-linkedin-and-tiktok?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss
Created 19d | Apr 17, 2025, 3:10:07 PM


Login to add comment

Other posts in this group

Inside the Grindr CEO’s ‘hardcore’ vision for the LGBTQ dating app’s future

George Arison is telling me about a hookup.

Arison, the 47-year-old CEO of the LGBTQ dating app and social network Grindr, recalls an encounter with a man who ranked low in physical chem

May 6, 2025, 11:10:04 AM | Fast company - tech
‘AI is already eating its own’: Prompt engineering is quickly going extinct

Just two years ago, prompt engineering was hailed as a hot new job in tech. Now, it has all but disappeared.

At the beginning of the corporate AI boom, some companies sought out large la

May 6, 2025, 11:10:04 AM | Fast company - tech
Goodbye human drivers? Waymo’s robotaxis are now fully operational

Summoning a robotaxi from your phone is not a futuristic fantasy since Waymo achieved full commercial deployment.

https://www.fastcompany.com/91325288/goodbye-human-drivers-waymos-robotaxis-a

May 6, 2025, 8:50:02 AM | Fast company - tech
‘You got to be really careful what you tie your name to’: The Hawk Tuah girl is planning a rebrand

Haliey Welch, better known as the Hawk Tuah girl, is ready for a rebrand.

After being thrust into the spotlight in 2024, thanks to her now-iconic “Hawk Tuah” catchphrase—featured in a vi

May 5, 2025, 11:30:07 PM | Fast company - tech
Anthropic hires a top Biden official to lead its new AI-for-social-good team (exclusive)

Anthropic is turning to a Biden administration alum to run its new Beneficial Deployments team, which is tasked with helping extend the benefits of its AI to organizations focused on social good—p

May 5, 2025, 9:20:03 PM | Fast company - tech
Speed-limiting devices could be coming for reckless U.S. drivers in these states

A teenager who admitted being “addicted to speed” behind the wheel had totaled two other cars in the year before he slammed into a minivan at 112 mph (180 kph) in a Seattle suburb,

May 5, 2025, 4:40:03 PM | Fast company - tech
Nvidia chips could face new tracking rules under a bipartisan bill to stop chip smuggling to China

A U.S. lawmaker plans to introduce legislation in coming weeks to verify the location of

May 5, 2025, 4:40:02 PM | Fast company - tech