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The ultimate impact of AI isn't just enhancing employee productivity via software. It's about companies transitioning from selling tools to selling outcomes. For example, an HR software provider could evolve to sell the automated work of an HR professional, handling payroll queries and benefits directly.
Industries with historically low software adoption (like trial law or dentistry) are now viable markets. Instead of selling a tool, AI startups are selling an outcome—the automation of a specific labor role. This shifts the value proposition from a software expense to a direct labor cost replacement.
Historically, software did ~10% of the work (tracking, organizing). AI will invert this, with software actively performing 70-80% of tasks. This fundamental shift means customers will refuse to buy legacy software that doesn't do the majority of the work for them, massively expanding the total addressable market.
The business model is shifting from selling software to selling outcomes. Instead of creating a tool and inviting users, create pre-trained agents that perform valuable work. Then, invite companies to a workspace where this 'team' of AI employees is ready to start delivering value immediately.
The most profitable way to leverage AI tools without code is to package their output as a managed service. Instead of selling access to an AI, sell lead generation, process automation, or financial analysis on a monthly retainer, with the AI doing the heavy lifting behind the scenes.
AI tools aren't just making employees more efficient; they are replacing human labor. This allows software companies to move from cheap per-seat pricing to a new model based on outcomes, like charging per support ticket resolved, capturing a much larger share of the value.
The transition from AI as a productivity tool (co-pilot) to an autonomous agent integrated into team workflows represents a quantum leap in value creation. This shift from efficiency enhancement to completing material tasks independently is where massive revenue opportunities lie.
AI is transforming business models by enabling companies to sell software bundled with the actual work it performs. This "work-as-a-service" approach is unlocking historically software-resistant markets like legal and construction, where the value proposition is the completed task, not just the tool.
The paradigm shift with AI agents is from "tools to click buttons in" (like CRMs) to autonomous systems that work for you in the background. This is a new form of productivity, akin to delegating tasks to a team member rather than just using a better tool yourself.
In a world where AI makes software cheap or free, the primary value shifts to specialized human expertise. Companies can monetize by using their software as a low-cost distribution channel to sell high-margin, high-ticket services that customers cannot easily replicate, like specialized security analysis.
Unlike traditional software that supports workflows, AI can execute them. This shifts the value proposition from optimizing IT budgets to replacing entire labor functions, massively expanding the total addressable market for software companies.