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AI allows service-based businesses to operate with software-like efficiency and high gross margins (e.g., 75%). This has created a new category, "Service as a Software," causing a major shift where private equity firms now value these service companies similarly to traditional SaaS businesses.

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Industries with historically low software adoption (like trial law or dentistry) are now viable markets. Instead of selling a tool, AI startups are selling an outcome—the automation of a specific labor role. This shifts the value proposition from a software expense to a direct labor cost replacement.

A new generation of AI application companies are being run with extreme leanness and efficiency. They are achieving revenue-per-employee figures between $500K and $5M, dwarfing the public software company average of ~$400K and signaling a fundamental shift in scalable operating models.

VCs have traditionally ignored the massive $16T services sector due to its low margins. AI automation can fundamentally change this by eliminating repetitive tasks, allowing these companies to achieve margin profiles similar to software businesses, thus making the sector newly viable for venture investment.

As large AI models absorb functions of traditional SaaS products, investors and entrepreneurs are shifting focus back to tech-enabled services. Integrating AI deeply into physical services and workflows is now seen as creating more defensible, lasting value than pure software, reversing a years-long trend.

AI is making core software functionality nearly free, creating an existential crisis for traditional SaaS companies. The old model of 90%+ gross margins is disappearing. The future will be dominated by a few large AI players with lower margins, alongside a strategic shift towards monetizing high-value services.

AI tools aren't just making employees more efficient; they are replacing human labor. This allows software companies to move from cheap per-seat pricing to a new model based on outcomes, like charging per support ticket resolved, capturing a much larger share of the value.

AI is moving beyond enhancing worker productivity to completing entire projects, like drug discovery or engineering designs. This shift means software will be priced like a services business, based on the value of the outcome delivered, not the number of users with access.

Businesses previously considered non-venture scale due to service-based models and low margins, like Managed Service Providers (MSPs), are becoming investable. By building with an AI-first core, these companies can achieve the high margins and scalability required for venture returns, blurring the line between service and product.

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.

Traditionally, service businesses lack scalability for VC. But AI startups are adopting a 'manual first, automate later' approach. They deliver high-touch services to gain traction, while simultaneously building AI to automate 90%+ of the work, eventually achieving software-like margins and growth.

AI Is Creating "Service as a Software" Businesses With Margins That Attract SaaS-Level Valuations | RiffOn