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Instead of selling AI tools to incumbents (e.g., law firms who bill by the hour), build an AI-first service that delivers the end result directly to the customer. This avoids conflicts of interest and captures more value.
Customers are hesitant to trust a black-box AI with critical operations. The winning business model is to sell a complete outcome or service, using AI internally for a massive efficiency advantage while keeping humans in the loop for quality and trust.
Founders are stuck in a SaaS mindset, selling tools to existing service providers. The bigger opportunity is to build new, AI-first service companies (e.g., accounting, legal) that use AI to deliver a superior end-to-end solution directly to customers.
Instead of selling AI co-pilots, legal tech startup Crosby operates as a full-stack law firm using AI internally. This model allows them to continuously re-orchestrate workflows between human lawyers and AI as models improve. This captures the entire value of automation rather than just the limited margin from selling a software tool to other firms.
When disrupting a market, selling enabling tools to incumbents (e.g., research agencies) is less effective than competing directly. Incumbents have misaligned incentives and are often low-intent "tire kickers," whereas their end-clients will readily switch for a better, faster, cheaper solution.
Terra Security chose to sell its AI pentesting solution directly to end customers rather than licensing it to existing pentesting firms. This strategy provides direct product feedback, builds brand equity, and creates market pressure on incumbents, forcing them to adapt or be replaced.
To penetrate tech-resistant markets like personal injury law, the winning model is not selling AI software but offering an AI-powered service. Finch acts as an outsourced, AI-augmented paralegal team, an easier value proposition for firms to adopt than training existing staff on new, complex tools.
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.
An AI-native service provider goes directly to the end customer, bypassing intermediaries. They offer a superior result (e.g., faster, cheaper cybersecurity) at a lower price, making the switch an easy decision by solving the entire problem.
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.