Get your free personalized podcast brief

We scan new podcasts and send you the top 5 insights daily.

Founders waiting for a cyclical economic rebound to save their non-AI products are mistaken. The market has permanently shifted. There is no new budget for old workflows; all net-new enterprise spend is being directed toward AI-native or AI-enhanced solutions.

Related Insights

Corporate America has decided AI is a mandatory strategic bet, shifting from ROI-based adoption to “willing it into existence.” This top-down mandate ensures a 1-2 year boom in AI spending, creating a period of presumed success before a potential retrenchment.

Selling an efficiency-focused SaaS tool is harder than ever. CIOs are cutting classic SaaS tools while expanding their AI budget. Any remaining efficiency spend is being consumed by price hikes from giants like Salesforce, leaving no room for new, non-AI vendors.

Founders are no longer pitching traditional software businesses. The focus has shifted entirely to AI-native companies building 'systems of intelligence' or 'systems of action'. This reflects a market belief that existing software workflows without a deep AI moat are too easily replicated and devalued.

Companies like Notion and Datadog are re-accelerating by targeting new, dedicated AI budgets. This is separate from shrinking 'efficiency tool' budgets. Growth comes from solving problems that unlock this specific new spending category, not just adding a minor AI feature.

The pace of change in AI has been so rapid that any business plan or set of assumptions established before mid-2023 is likely invalid. Founders must re-evaluate their entire strategy, from tech stack and team composition to funding needs, or risk being 'dead on arrival.'

The explosive AI revenue growth stems from corporations re-categorizing the spending. It's no longer a line item in a constrained IT budget but a strategic investment in labor augmentation and replacement. This unlocks a vastly larger pool of capital from operational budgets, fueling hypergrowth.

The current market leaves no room for mediocrity. SaaS companies are either at the forefront of AI, delivering jaw-dropping value and capturing new budget, or they are being displaced. Hiding behind long-term contracts is a temporary solution, as there is no longer a middle ground.

The initial explosion in AI spending was largely additive, not a replacement for existing budgets. Going forward, this will change. Companies will start substituting AI spend for traditional SaaS licenses and human capital as they rationalize operating expenses and seek higher ROI.

Incumbent software vendors face a crisis: customers aren't churning, but all new enterprise budget is directed at AI. This traps legacy platforms as stagnant 'systems of record' while AI applications built on top capture all future growth.

A 'tale of two cities' exists in SaaS. Traditional software budgets are frozen, with spending eaten by price hikes from incumbents. Simultaneously, new, separate AI budgets are creating massive opportunities, making the market feel dead for classic SaaS but booming for AI-native solutions.