Traditionally, developers choose the tech stack. With self-writing platforms, business owners describe needs directly to an AI. Their criteria become security and reliability, not developer familiarity, dissolving the network effects that protect incumbent platforms.
"Vibe coding" platforms, which allow users to create apps from natural language, pose a direct threat to the B2B SaaS market. For simple workflows, it is becoming faster for a team to build its own personalized app than to navigate the sales, procurement, and integration process for an existing SaaS product.
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.
Companies are now rejecting expensive SaaS contracts because their internal teams can build equivalent custom solutions in days using AI coding tools. This trend signals a fundamental threat to the traditional SaaS business model, as the 'build vs. buy' calculation has dramatically shifted.
AI is becoming the new UI, allowing users to generate bespoke interfaces for specific workflows on the fly. This fundamentally threatens the core value proposition of many SaaS companies, which is essentially selling a complex UX built on a database. The entire ecosystem will need to adapt.
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.
The ease of building applications on top of powerful LLMs will lead companies to create their own custom software instead of buying third-party SaaS products. This shift, combined with the risk of foundation models moving up the stack, signals the end of the traditional SaaS era.
The core value proposition of no-code platforms—building software without code—is being eroded by AI tools. AI-assisted 'vibe coding' makes it much easier for non-specialists to build internal line-of-business apps, a key use case for no-code, posing an existential threat to major players.
In the future, it will be easier for businesses to build their own custom software (e.g., Salesforce) through prompting than to buy and configure an off-the-shelf solution. This shift towards "liquid software" will fundamentally challenge the one-size-fits-all SaaS model, especially for companies that currently rely on implementation partners.
The fundamental shift from AI isn't about replacing foundational model companies like OpenAI. Instead, AI creates a new technological substrate—productized intelligence—that will engender an entirely new breed of software companies, marking the end of the traditional SaaS playbook.
Instead of integrating third-party SaaS tools for functions like observability, developers can now prompt code-generating AIs to build these features directly into their applications. This trend makes the traditional dev tool market less relevant, as custom-built solutions become faster to implement than adopting external platforms.