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A writer used AI to clone services like Campaign Monitor and Quicken for his personal needs. This "N of 1" software dramatically cuts costs (from $7k/year to $150) and provides custom features, representing a new frontier for solo entrepreneurs to build their own infrastructure.

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Traditional SaaS is like a ready-made shirt—cheap and fast, but ill-fitting. The founder argues AI makes custom-fit software that adapts to each enterprise's unique processes cheaper and faster to deploy than one-size-fits-all SaaS, disrupting the entire software stack.

Users can now prompt an AI to build a custom version of a SaaS tool, tailored to their exact needs. This marks a shift towards personal, disposable software, which increases software's abundance while simultaneously eroding the moats of traditional SaaS businesses.

The collapse of software development costs enables individuals to build niche SaaS products for side income or as a primary living. This creates a new market segment below venture-scale businesses, which Elena Verna calls "mom and pop SaaS."

Just as YouTube lowered media distribution costs, AI is lowering software development costs. This could shift the SaaS market away from large, one-size-fits-all platforms toward a model where small, elite teams deliver highly customized software solutions directly to enterprise clients.

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.

Individuals will use AI to build bespoke software for personal use. A subset of these tools will find a niche market, creating entrepreneurs who operate outside the VC-funded, subscription-SaaS model, potentially favoring one-time purchase models due to low development costs.

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.

AI drastically lowers software development costs, making hyper-niche products commercially viable without venture funding. The guest notes he'd happily pay $15/month for a custom Slack inbox tool, proving a market exists for these long-tail solutions that can be profitable small businesses.

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.

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.