


























Maximilien Abadie, Deputy CEO and a member of the Executive Committee, Lectra.

getty
The term “SaaS-pocalypse” has recently entered the technology and finance lexicons with striking force. It reflects a growing narrative that software as a service (SaaS), long considered the benchmark for scalable and predictable growth, is now facing challenges from the rapid rise of artificial intelligence (AI), especially agentic AI and generative coding tools. Yet beneath the headlines and market volatility lies a more nuanced reality. What we are witnessing is not the end of SaaS, but its transformation.
Over the past year, high-profile analyses have suggested a weakening of the SaaS model. The argument: AI agents are reshaping how software is designed, built and used, with traditional seat-based applications giving way to intelligent systems that orchestrate entire workflows.
This perception has impacted markets, with some SaaS companies experiencing single-day declines exceeding 10% following earnings or shifts in investor sentiment. Some view this as a structural shift, driven by agentic AI executing end-to-end processes and generative AI lowering barriers to custom software creation. The “buy versus build” equation is evolving, along with how value is captured.
Yet this moment also reflects broader market recalibration. After years of high liquidity and premium valuations, SaaS companies are returning to fundamentals. Today’s repricing reflects both normalization and potential disruption.
The disruption narrative is compelling, but it can overstate AI’s current capabilities. Organizations still rely on robust software and the expertise of those who design, implement and manage it.
AI is a powerful productivity lever: It accelerates development, enhances user experiences and automates repetitive tasks. Yet it cannot replace the need for scalable, secure, compliant systems or the complexity of enterprise environments.
Software development goes beyond code generation. It requires a deep understanding of business processes, integration with legacy systems and careful attention to compliance and data governance, all areas grounded in human expertise. At its core is data: how it is structured, managed and interpreted, requiring strong industry-specific knowledge. Companies cannot delegate their entire software stack to AI with a simple prompt.
Customer expectations are evolving. Organizations now seek solutions that drive measurable results, enhancing productivity, efficiency and profitability, rather than relying on standalone features or generic tools.
This shift has profound implications for SaaS. It pushes the model beyond traditional licensing toward value-based approaches, where pricing reflects outcomes delivered rather than seats or usage. SaaS is moving from a product-centric model to a performance-driven one.
For specialized software providers, this evolution represents a clear opportunity rather than a threat. In industries such as fashion, automotive and furniture, software is tightly interwoven with operational performance. Customers are not simply purchasing tools; they are optimizing complex processes, reducing waste, accelerating time-to-market and strengthening their competitive edge. This dynamic creates a strong foundation for SaaS models that are both resilient and adaptable.
At the same time, companies will need to become far more effective at connecting their diverse SaaS ecosystems. Here, AI can serve as a powerful enabler, bridging disparate systems while transforming the resulting data into structured, actionable insights.
This dynamic creates a strong foundation for SaaS models that are both resilient and adaptable, reinforcing the role of recurring revenue as a strategic buffer in an unstable economic and technological environment.
The real transformation of SaaS lies in how it integrates AI, not as a replacement, but as an amplifier. AI enhances solutions by enabling predictive insights, automating complex decisions and increasing operational agility for customers.
This shift reinforces the importance of domain expertise. Generic AI tools can be powerful, but they often lack the contextual understanding needed to address industry-specific challenges. By combining AI with deep sector knowledge, specialized SaaS providers can deliver differentiated value.
At the same time, outcome-based models strengthen alignment between vendors and customers. Success is no longer measured by usage alone, but by tangible business impact. This creates a virtuous cycle: Better outcomes drive wider adoption, which in turn supports sustainable growth.
Replacing SaaS solutions with custom platforms and agentic workflows is an attractive proposition. Yet relying on in-house developments risks critical processes, while established best practices in specialized software remain underutilized. Such shortcuts often replicate existing processes, whereas agentic AI offers real potential to reinvent them.
The true game-changer lies in transforming all business processes. Software development is no longer constrained by long R&D cycles, fundamentally altering how software is designed, specified and brought to market. As the pace accelerates, organizations must adapt. Manager and individual contributor roles will evolve, requiring collaboration with agents that may challenge existing decisions and workflows.
This evolution also shifts accountability, raising considerations around who ultimately holds responsibility—the human or the agent—and what safeguards and controls are needed.
“SaaS-pocalypse” may be a compelling headline, but it oversimplifies reality. The SaaS model is not collapsing; it is evolving. AI is both a catalyst and an enabler, challenging assumptions while opening new paths for innovation.
The path forward is clear: Move closer to customers, focus relentlessly on outcomes and integrate AI in ways that enhance core capabilities. Those who succeed will not only navigate disruption—they will emerge stronger and more relevant.
I am convinced that the future of SaaS lies in combining technological excellence, such as AI, with deep industry expertise. In doing so, SaaS becomes more than a delivery model; it becomes a strategic driver of sustainable growth. For organizations ready to embrace this shift, the opportunity is significant.
Forbes Technology Council is an invitation-only community for world-class CIOs, CTOs and technology executives. Do I qualify?
此内容由惯性聚合(RSS阅读器)自动聚合整理,仅供阅读参考。 原文来自 — 版权归原作者所有。