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While product teams are a natural fit for AI coding tools, Replit's CEO identifies Operations teams as a surprisingly high-ROI customer segment. Ops teams are often stuck with inadequate SaaS tools and manual workflows, and AI agents can deliver massive efficiency gains by automating tasks like deal desk and support operations.

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The biggest productivity unlock isn't just making customer support cheaper. It's using AI models to eliminate the need for separate human archetypes for sales (yapper) and support (listener). Companies will bundle these functions into one unified team aimed at a higher-level business goal, like improving CAC.

Replit is evolving beyond a developer tool into a 'cockpit' for entire businesses. Their vision is that coding, facilitated by AI agents, will become the primary interface for all knowledge work, enabling roles in marketing, sales, and design to execute complex tasks by prompting agents.

Unlike SaaS which sells to limited software budgets (e.g., 1% of revenue), vertical AI agents automate core business functions. This allows them to tap into much larger operational and labor budgets. Companies can capture 4-10% of a customer's total spend by replacing expensive human-led tasks like customer support.

Don't get distracted by flashy AI demonstrations. The highest immediate ROI from AI comes from automating mundane, repetitive, and essential business functions. Focus on tasks like custom report generation and handling common customer service inquiries, as these deliver consistent, measurable value.

Ladder built custom AI tools to handle operational tasks at scale. "Maeve AI" manages 90% of support tickets, while "Ladder Pulse" synthesizes group chats for coaches. This strategy uses AI for leverage, allowing a small team to deliver a high-touch experience without a large headcount.

The transition from AI as a productivity tool (co-pilot) to an autonomous agent integrated into team workflows represents a quantum leap in value creation. This shift from efficiency enhancement to completing material tasks independently is where massive revenue opportunities lie.

Instead of traditional IT roles focused on software, an AI Ops person focuses on identifying and automating workflows. They work with teams to eliminate busy work and return hundreds of hours, shifting employees from performing tasks to directing AI.

For companies wondering where to start with AI, target the most labor-intensive, process-driven functions. Customer support is an ideal starting point, as AI can handle repetitive tasks, leading to lower costs, faster response times, and an improved customer experience while freeing up human agents for more complex issues.

Snowflake's former CRO offers a pragmatic view of AI, calling it a 'task automator.' He stresses that for enterprise adoption, AI tools can't just be 'cool.' They must deliver a clear return on investment by either generating revenue or creating significant cost savings, like the 418 hours per week saved by their support team.

While consumer-facing AI grabs headlines, Snap's CEO is more excited about the potential for agentic AI to transform internal business operations. He sees the biggest near-term impact in driving massive efficiencies for small and medium-sized businesses across functions like sales, bug reporting, and client management.