The rise of AI services companies like Invisible and Palantir, which build custom on-prem solutions, marks a reversal of the standardized cloud SaaS trend. Enterprises now prioritize proprietary, custom AI applications to gain a competitive edge.

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Traditional SaaS switching costs were based on painful data migrations, which LLMs may now automate. The new moat for AI companies is creating deep, customized integrations into a customer's unique operational workflows. This is achieved through long, hands-on pilot periods that make the AI solution indispensable and hard to replace.

The key for enterprises isn't integrating general AI like ChatGPT but creating "proprietary intelligence." This involves fine-tuning smaller, custom models on their unique internal data and workflows, creating a competitive moat that off-the-shelf solutions cannot replicate.

Most successful SaaS companies weren't built on new core tech, but by packaging existing tech (like databases or CRMs) into solutions for specific industries. AI is no different. The opportunity lies in unbundling a general tool like ChatGPT and rebundling its capabilities into vertical-specific products.

The ease of building applications on top of powerful LLMs will lead companies to create their own custom software instead of buying third-party SaaS products. This shift, combined with the risk of foundation models moving up the stack, signals the end of the traditional SaaS era.

The "agentic revolution" will be powered by small, specialized models. Businesses and public sector agencies don't need a cloud-based AI that can do 1,000 tasks; they need an on-premise model fine-tuned for 10-20 specific use cases, driven by cost, privacy, and control requirements.

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.

In the future, it will be easier for businesses to build their own custom software (e.g., Salesforce) through prompting than to buy and configure an off-the-shelf solution. This shift towards "liquid software" will fundamentally challenge the one-size-fits-all SaaS model, especially for companies that currently rely on implementation partners.

The fundamental shift from AI isn't about replacing foundational model companies like OpenAI. Instead, AI creates a new technological substrate—productized intelligence—that will engender an entirely new breed of software companies, marking the end of the traditional SaaS playbook.

YC Partner Harsh Taggar notes a strategic shift where new AI companies are not just selling software to incumbents (e.g., an AI tool for insurance). Instead, they are building "AI-native full stack" businesses that operate as the incumbent themselves (e.g., an AI-powered insurance brokerage).

Large companies integrate AI through three primary methods: buying third-party vendor solutions (e.g., Harvey for legal), building custom internal tools to improve efficiency, or embedding AI directly into their customer-facing products. Understanding these pathways is critical for any B2B AI startup's go-to-market strategy.