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Metering AI usage by tokens is becoming unmanageable for non-technical departments like marketing, sales, and HR. The complexity of tracking usage and tying it to value will likely force a market shift toward flat-fee, unlimited usage plans priced on outcomes or per-employee value instead.

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Flat-rate AI plans are becoming economically unviable due to token-hungry agents. Companies like Google and Microsoft are pushing usage-based billing, forcing enterprises to confront the surprisingly high real cost of running models at scale, which was previously hidden by subsidized pricing experiments.

Intense demand for AI tokens is outstripping compute supply, making flat-rate SaaS pricing unsustainable. Companies like GitHub are now shifting to usage-based billing to cover escalating inference costs, marking a fundamental change in how AI products are sold and signaling a broader industry trend.

Confusing credit-based AI pricing models will likely be replaced by a straightforward value proposition: selling AI agents at a fixed price equivalent to the cost of one human worker who can perform the work of ten. This simplifies budgeting and clearly communicates ROI to CFOs.

As more companies integrate AI, their costs are tied to variable usage (e.g., tokens, inference). This is causing a profound, economy-wide transformation away from predictable seat-based subscriptions towards more dynamic usage-based models to align costs with revenue.

The most logical pricing model for AI is to benchmark it against the human labor costs it displaces. While a PR challenge for legacy companies, AI-native firms will likely adopt this outcome-based model because it is more tangible for finance leaders than abstract, unpredictable credit systems.

The most heated topic among Fortune 500 CIOs is no longer which AI model is most powerful, but how to manage unpredictable and soaring token costs. Companies are struggling to find the right strategies—from workload prioritization to user-based access tiers—to create a predictable cost model in a rapidly evolving tech landscape.

The dominant per-user-per-month SaaS business model is becoming obsolete for AI-native companies. The new standard is consumption or outcome-based pricing. Customers will pay for the specific task an AI completes or the value it generates, not for a seat license, fundamentally changing how software is sold.

The business model for AI is pivoting away from SaaS-style subscriptions. Enterprise-focused labs like Anthropic see massive revenue not from adding users, but from the immense token consumption of API power users. A single developer can be 100x more valuable than a subscriber, forcing a shift to consumption-based pricing.

As AI agents make developers more productive, companies may need fewer of them. Pegging revenue to developer headcount is therefore a losing long-term strategy. Future pricing models for AI developer tools will decouple from seats and focus on usage, overages, or outcomes.

As AI agents perform more work and human headcount decreases, the traditional seat-based pricing model becomes obsolete. The value is no longer tied to human users. SaaS companies must transition to consumption-based models that charge for the automated work performed and value generated by AI.

Per-Token Pricing for AI Is an Unsustainable Model for General Knowledge Work | RiffOn