Users are leveraging AI agents to build their own bespoke software, stripping away unused features from SaaS giants like Notion. This trend toward hyper-personalization threatens the one-size-fits-all SaaS model as users create cheaper, more effective personal tools.
The one-size-fits-all SaaS model is becoming obsolete in the enterprise. The future lies in creating "hyper-personalized systems of agility" that are custom-configured for each client. This involves unifying a company's fragmented data and building bespoke intelligence and workflows on top of their legacy systems.
The value in software is shifting from SaaS platforms (like CRMs) to the AI agent layer that automates work on top of them. This will turn established SaaS companies into simple data repositories, or "hooks," diminishing their stickiness and pricing power as agents can easily migrate data.
The barrier to creating software is collapsing. Non-coders can now build sophisticated, personalized applications for specific workflows in under an hour. This points to a future where individuals and teams create their own disposable, custom tools, replacing subscriptions to numerous niche SaaS products.
AI tools enable users to create bespoke applications tailored to their needs. This shift towards personalized software challenges the one-size-fits-all SaaS model, potentially rendering many subscription products obsolete and causing market underperformance, as seen in the Morgan Stanley SAS index.
AI is becoming the new UI, allowing users to generate bespoke interfaces for specific workflows on the fly. This fundamentally threatens the core value proposition of many SaaS companies, which is essentially selling a complex UX built on a database. The entire ecosystem will need to adapt.
For decades, buying generalized SaaS was more efficient than building custom software. AI coding agents reverse this. Now, companies can build hyper-specific, more effective tools internally for less cost than a bloated SaaS subscription, because they only need to solve their unique problem.
Nimble small and medium-sized businesses will increasingly use AI to build custom internal tools, especially for CRM. They will opt to create the 20% of features they actually need, rather than pay for complex, expensive enterprise software where they ignore 80% of the functionality.
Non-technical users are leveraging agents like Moltbot to build their own hyper-personalized software. By simply describing a problem in natural language, they can create internal tools that perfectly solve their needs, eliminating the need to subscribe to many single-purpose SaaS applications.
The disruption to software isn't just about professional developers. It's about non-technical employees, like sales executives, using AI tools like Claude to build functional internal applications that replace paid SaaS products. This trend democratizes software creation and directly undermines the traditional SaaS business model from within customer organizations.
Traditional SaaS platforms derive value from their UI over a database. AI's primary threat is its ability to create personalized UIs and automate workflows on top of any database, rendering expensive, one-size-fits-all SaaS interfaces obsolete. The software becomes a commoditized backend.