Miro's CEO highlights a market paradox: CIOs are aggressively consolidating their software stack to save costs, yet simultaneously, they are allocating significant budget for AI experiments that promise major business impact. This creates a dual-track market where both platform consolidation and niche AI tool adoption are happening at once.

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Selling an efficiency-focused SaaS tool is harder than ever. CIOs are cutting classic SaaS tools while expanding their AI budget. Any remaining efficiency spend is being consumed by price hikes from giants like Salesforce, leaving no room for new, non-AI vendors.

A fundamental shift is occurring where startups allocate limited budgets toward specialized AI models and developer tools, rather than defaulting to AWS for all infrastructure. This signals a de-bundling of the traditional cloud stack and a change in platform priorities.

The initial enterprise AI wave of scattered, small-scale proofs-of-concept is over. Companies are now consolidating efforts around a few high-conviction use cases and deploying them at massive scale across tens of thousands of employees, moving from exploration to production.

While overall enterprise software spending is hitting record highs, this growth is not a rising tide for all. Half the increase is consumed by existing vendors' price hikes and 30% is allocated to new AI initiatives, leaving minimal budget for traditional SaaS tools.

The current proliferation of AI tools has led to functional overlap, with many providers creeping into each other's spaces. CMOs will move from broad experimentation and tool acquisition to a strategic consolidation to eliminate redundancy and focus on the most effective, integrated solutions for their stack.

Enterprise software budgets are growing, but the money is being reallocated. CIOs are forced to cut functional, "good-to-have" apps to pay for price increases from core vendors and to fund new AI tools. This means even happy customers of non-mission-critical software may churn as budgets are redirected to top priorities.

A massive budget shift is underway where companies spend exponentially more on AI agents than on foundational software like CRM. One small team spends $500k annually on AI agents versus just $10k on Salesforce, signaling a tectonic shift in software value and spending priorities.

CIOs report that the unbudgeted 'soft costs' of implementing AI—training, onboarding, and business process change—are the highest they've ever seen. This extreme cost and effort will make companies highly reluctant to switch AI vendors, creating strong defensibility and lock-in for the platforms chosen during this initial wave.

The current era of broad enterprise AI experimentation will end. The CEO foresees 2026 as a "year of rationalization," where CFO pressure will force companies to consolidate AI tools and cut vendors that fail to demonstrate tangible productivity gains and clear return on investment.

A 'tale of two cities' exists in SaaS. Traditional software budgets are frozen, with spending eaten by price hikes from incumbents. Simultaneously, new, separate AI budgets are creating massive opportunities, making the market feel dead for classic SaaS but booming for AI-native solutions.

CIOs Consolidate Platforms While AI Experiments Get a Blank Check | RiffOn