The strategy of acquiring incumbent companies to accelerate AI adoption is creating a new investment category. Unlike private equity, which optimizes existing assets for efficiency, this new class focuses on fundamentally transforming them into something entirely new.
A market bifurcation is underway where investors prioritize AI startups with extreme growth rates over traditional SaaS companies. This creates a "changing of the guard," forcing established SaaS players to adopt AI aggressively or risk being devalued as legacy assets, while AI-native firms command premium valuations.
Venture capital is shifting from just funding disruptors to acquiring incumbent businesses, like a nonprofit health system. This provides a real-world environment for their portfolio startups to deploy and scale AI solutions, bypassing traditional enterprise sales cycles.
Instead of selling software to traditional industries, a more defensible approach is to build vertically integrated companies. This involves acquiring or starting a business in a non-sexy industry (e.g., a law firm, hospital) and rebuilding its entire operational stack with AI at its core, something a pure software vendor cannot do.
As AI infrastructure giants become government-backed utilities, their investment appeal diminishes like banks after 2008. The next wave of value creation will come from stagnant, existing businesses that adopt AI to unlock new margins, leveraging their established brands and distribution channels rather than building new rails from scratch.
Private Equity value creation has evolved. In the 2000s, it was driven by leverage; in the 2010s, by digital transformation. Today, AI serves as the new foundational "operating system" for growth, embedding intelligence into every process, contract, and customer touchpoint to drive returns.
AI should be viewed not as a new technological wave, but as the final, mature stage of the 60-year computer revolution. This reframes investment strategy away from betting on a new paradigm and towards finding incumbents who can leverage the mature technology, much like containerization capped the mass production era.
The rapid evolution of AI means traditional private equity M&A timelines are too slow. PE firms and their portfolio companies must now behave more like venture capitalists, acquiring earlier-stage, riskier AI companies to secure necessary technology before it becomes unaffordable or obsolete.
For venture capitalists investing in AI, the primary success indicator is massive Total Addressable Market (TAM) expansion. Traditional concerns like entry price become secondary when a company is fundamentally redefining its market size. Without this expansion, the investment is not worthwhile in the current AI landscape.
Recent acquisitions of slow-growth public SaaS companies are not just value grabs but turnaround plays. Acquirers believe these companies' distribution can be revitalized by injecting AI-native products, creating a path back to high growth and higher multiples.
YC Partner Harsh Taggar notes a strategic shift where new AI companies are not just selling software to incumbents (e.g., an AI tool for insurance). Instead, they are building "AI-native full stack" businesses that operate as the incumbent themselves (e.g., an AI-powered insurance brokerage).