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The threat of AI models replicating SaaS features is real. Superhuman's defense isn't a superior core technology but a platform strategy. The bet is that users won't build their own tools if the platform offers a powerful network effect of pre-built, integrated agents that work everywhere, creating a defensible ecosystem.

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The rise of agentic coding is creating a "SaaSpocalypse." These agents can migrate data, learn different workflows, and handle integrations, which undermines the core moats of SaaS companies: data switching costs, workflow lock-in, and integration complexity. This makes the high gross margins of SaaS businesses a prime target for disruption.

As AI and better tools commoditize software creation, traditional technology moats are shrinking. The new defensible advantages are forms of liquidity: aggregated data, marketplace activity, or social interactions. These network effects are harder for competitors to replicate than code or features.

AI capabilities offer strong differentiation against human alternatives. However, this is not a sustainable moat against competitors who can use the same AI models. Lasting defensibility still comes from traditional moats like workflow integration and network effects.

According to Box CEO Aaron Levie, the stickiest SaaS products are those with strong network effects, deep integrations, and mission-critical workflows. A simple heuristic for vulnerability: if you can get the same value from a fresh install as a decade-old one, your product can be easily replaced by AI-generated software.

As AI makes software development nearly free, traditional engineering moats are disappearing. Businesses must now rely on durable advantages like network effects, economies of scale, brand trust, and defensible IP to survive, becoming "unsloppable."

Point-solution SaaS products are at a massive disadvantage in the age of AI because they lack the broad, integrated dataset needed to power effective features. Bundled platforms that 'own the mine' of data are best positioned to win, as AI can perform magic when it has access to a rich, semantic data layer.

Creating a basic AI coding tool is easy. The defensible moat comes from building a vertically integrated platform with its own backend infrastructure like databases, user management, and integrations. This is extremely difficult for competitors to replicate, especially if they rely on third-party services like Superbase.

AI is not killing B2B SaaS, but it is fundamentally changing the competitive landscape by making software easier to build. This commoditizes core features, forcing existing SaaS companies to develop unique, defensible moats beyond just code to protect themselves against a new wave of competitors who can quickly "vibe code" similar solutions.

SaaS products like Salesforce won't be easily ripped out. The real danger is that new AI agents will operate across all SaaS tools, becoming the primary user interface and capturing the next wave of value. This relegates existing SaaS platforms to a lower, less valuable infrastructure layer.

In enterprise AI, competitive advantage comes less from the underlying model and more from the surrounding software. Features like versioning, analytics, integrations, and orchestration systems are critical for enterprise adoption and create stickiness that models alone cannot.