Pure value-based pricing (e.g., per seat) fails for AI products due to unpredictable token costs from power users. Vercel's SVP of Product advises a hybrid model: one metric aligned with value (like seats) and another aligned with cost (like token usage) to ensure profitability.
AI products with a Product-Led Growth motion face a fundamental flaw in their unit economics. Customers expect predictable SaaS-like pricing (e.g., $20/month), but the company's costs are usage-based. This creates an inverse relationship where higher user engagement leads directly to lower or negative margins.
Many AI coding agents are unprofitable because their business model is broken. They charge a fixed subscription fee but pay variable, per-token costs for model inference. This means their most engaged power users, who should be their best customers, are actually their biggest cost centers, leading to negative gross margins.
Warp's initial subscription model, offering a fixed number of AI credits, became unprofitable as heavy usage grew. They were forced to switch to a consumption-based model, trading user complaints for sustainable, margin-positive growth, a crucial lesson for pricing AI applications.
AI startups should choose their pricing model based on a 2x2 matrix of autonomy (human-in-the-loop vs. fully automated) and attribution (how clearly its value can be measured). Low levels lead to seat-based pricing, while high levels of both unlock outcome-based models.
Standard SaaS pricing fails for agentic products because high usage becomes a cost center. Avoid the trap of profiting from non-use. Instead, implement a hybrid model with a fixed base and usage-based overages, or, ideally, tie pricing directly to measurable outcomes generated by the AI.
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.
Unlike high-margin SaaS, AI agents operate on thin 30-40% gross margins. This financial reality makes traditional seat-based pricing obsolete. To build a viable business, companies must create new systems to capture more revenue and manage agent costs effectively, ensuring profitability and growth from day one.
In the age of AI, software is shifting from a tool that assists humans to an agent that completes tasks. The pricing model should reflect this. Instead of a subscription for access (a license), charge for the value created when the AI successfully achieves a business outcome.
The shift to usage-based pricing for AI tools isn't just a revenue growth strategy. Enterprise vendors are adopting it to offset their own escalating cloud infrastructure costs, which scale directly with customer usage, thereby protecting their profit margins from their own suppliers.
AI startups often use traditional per-seat pricing to simplify purchasing for enterprise buyers. The CEO of Legora admits this is suboptimal for the vendor, as high LLM costs from power users can destroy margins. The shift to a more logical consumption-based model is currently blocked by the buyer's operational readiness, not the vendor's preference.