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Why SaaS Still Thrives Amid AI Disruption

Key Points

  • AI tools now let anyone generate and deploy code in plain English, enabling non‑engineers to launch software products with minimal cost.
  • Despite this “free software” potential, the market still rewards enterprise SaaS firms like Salesforce because they solve complex, high‑value workflow problems that require deep integration.
  • SaaS businesses benefit from sticky installations and long‑term contracts, creating strong customer inertia that makes it difficult for cheap, AI‑generated alternatives to displace them.
  • Established SaaS companies also enjoy entrenched distribution advantages—decades‑long sales relationships, brand recognition, and a trusted ecosystem—that new startups lack.
  • The greatest disruption may come from enterprises themselves repurposing their engineering talent toward AI, rather than from hobbyist coders, but this shift is unlikely to overthrow the core SaaS business model.

Full Transcript

# Why SaaS Still Thrives Amid AI Disruption **Source:** [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=42GqDCyQPPo](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=42GqDCyQPPo) **Duration:** 00:08:23 ## Summary - AI tools now let anyone generate and deploy code in plain English, enabling non‑engineers to launch software products with minimal cost. - Despite this “free software” potential, the market still rewards enterprise SaaS firms like Salesforce because they solve complex, high‑value workflow problems that require deep integration. - SaaS businesses benefit from sticky installations and long‑term contracts, creating strong customer inertia that makes it difficult for cheap, AI‑generated alternatives to displace them. - Established SaaS companies also enjoy entrenched distribution advantages—decades‑long sales relationships, brand recognition, and a trusted ecosystem—that new startups lack. - The greatest disruption may come from enterprises themselves repurposing their engineering talent toward AI, rather than from hobbyist coders, but this shift is unlikely to overthrow the core SaaS business model. ## Sections - [00:00:00](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=42GqDCyQPPo&t=0s) **AI‑Generated Code vs Enterprise SaaS Valuations** - The speaker argues that even though AI now lets anyone create cheap software, the high market valuations of firms like Salesforce persist because the real disruption will come from massive engineering teams within enterprises leveraging AI—not from basement hobbyists building tiny widgets. ## Full Transcript
0:00we're going to talk about a hard subject 0:01today what happens to software when 0:04making software costs nothing we are 0:06entering a world where AI is enabling 0:09extremely cheap software creation you no 0:12longer have to have a computer science 0:13degree you don't even have to know code 0:15anymore you can just type it in English 0:17and it will make the code for you and 0:20you will eventually be able to deploy it 0:22and presumably sell it the first person 0:25who is going to make a million dollar 0:28selling software when they don't know a 0:30line of code already exists is already 0:33writing code and is probably only a few 0:36months away from making that million 0:37dollar that's the world we live in and 0:39so the question I have is if that's the 0:42world we live in why does the stock 0:46market continue to Value publicly traded 0:50companies like 0:52Salesforce very very very 0:54highly why would you do that when 0:57companies like Clara are saying we RI 1:00out Salesforce we don't need need it 1:01anymore we created our own thing 1:04internally I'm going to tell you why I 1:06actually agree with the market on this 1:08one but maybe not for the reason you 1:11suspect I do not think that just because 1:15someone in their basement can type into 1:17repet and make a piece of code get it 1:21out there make a tiny widget sell it 1:24that that's going to disrupt enterprise 1:26software I don't even think that the 1:29thousands of Engineers is now being 1:30redeployed against AI across Enterprise 1:33companies which is a much more serious 1:34threat are going to fundamentally take 1:37away the SAS business model I don't and 1:40the reason why is because at the end of 1:43the 1:44day the businesses that are making money 1:47in SAS are making money off of solving 1:50really hard workflow problems with 1:52sticky installs on a distribution 1:55Advantage all three of those matter now 1:57startups have a harder time and we'll 1:59talk about that but if you are an 2:00established SAS company you have 2:02existing contracts people don't want to 2:05rip out your software if they don't have 2:06to generally speaking there's a lot of 2:08inertia in your favor you were already 2:11solving a problem for them presumably a 2:14problem that they found painful enough 2:16to pay you for now they may argue with 2:18you about the cost a little bit from 2:20time to time but your product team at 2:22this SAS business is busy making more 2:24product that delivers more value and 2:26helps support your margins which by the 2:29way that's what product ERS are supposed 2:30to 2:31do so that's the case just from a 2:35software perspective for why SAS 2:36businesses are still viable from a 2:39distribution perspective I think it's 2:41even stronger if you have an existing 2:43distribution Advantage if you have sales 2:47relationships with existing clients if 2:50you have been working with those clients 2:52for a decade or more if you are a 2:55well-known brand in the marketplace like 2:57Salesforce is it is extremely 3:00unlikely that you will suddenly lose 3:03that distribution advantage and just 3:06disappear into the 3:08sunset this is why even though it's 3:11technically true that Amazon is only 3:14ever a click away like you can always 3:16leave Amazon you can always go somewhere 3:18else you only have to type Amazon into 3:20the browser for it to appear you can 3:22type temo into the browser and it will 3:24appear Amazon doesn't have an inherent 3:26competitive advantage in your browser 3:28but you still go 3:30because the distribution advantage and 3:32the brand advantage of Amazon is really 3:34formidable and I notice that people who 3:36form a purchase relationship with Amazon 3:39tend to stick with it I'm one of them 3:41people who form a purchase relationship 3:43with Walmart or Walmart plus will tend 3:45to stick with 3:47it and that's something that Jeff 3:49deliberately architected in the 1990s as 3:53part of his timing for starting Amazon 3:55he said people's purchase relationships 3:58are going to change change with the 4:00internet and there's a limited window 4:02when they are flexible or rubbery and we 4:04can grab that purchase relationship 4:06build brand loyalty and people are going 4:08to stick with us if we deliver good 4:09service and that's what happened in the 4:12same way with 4:14SAS if people are used to buying from 4:17you and trust you especially for 4:19Enterprise critical applications they're 4:21going to keep trusting you fundamentally 4:24I think that is why the street values 4:27SAS companies highly still even in the 4:29the age of AI and I'll give you one more 4:31to think about at the end of the 4:35day these companies have 4:38every intention of going into AI 4:41Salesforce is going into AI so is every 4:43other sass company I know 4:44of they are investing in AI just as much 4:48if not more as all the startups that are 4:50AI native and they have all the 4:51incumbency advantages this reminds me of 4:55the cloud in the 4:562010s before software was licensed and 4:59Cloud was disruptive Adobe had to go 5:02through this whole reinvention process 5:04where they were selling licenses per 5:06seat and then eventually they had to 5:07move to a subscription cloud-based SAS 5:09model it was bitterly opposed internally 5:11at Adobe but it ended up remaking the 5:14company and cloud has been a savior for 5:18adobe's long-term revenues and profit 5:20Outlook so in the same way I think 5:23there's a lot of potential for existing 5:25Enterprise companies who already have 5:27distribution advantages like Adobe did 5:29back in the 2010s to reinvent themselves 5:33and get into AI the way adobi got into 5:36Cloud same thing and you see that motion 5:39you see Salesforce investing in and 5:41branding Einstein and you see other 5:44incumbents playing in AI as well so what 5:47does this mean if you are a startup what 5:49if you were building software in the 5:51space I want to characterize it in two 5:53classes I think if you are a solopreneur 5:55if you were building software on your 5:57own like I said the person who hasn't 5:59written a line of code but is going to 6:01make a million dollars off code already 6:03exists and probably will make that 6:04million dollars in the next few months 6:06it has never been a better time to be a 6:09solopreneur for startups the it's more 6:13complicated at the end of the day you 6:15can work faster with AI you can have a 6:17smaller Talent footprint at the same 6:19time you have to fight against those 6:22incumbents I just spent 5 minutes 6:24describing you have to fight against 6:26Salesforce and whatever the Salesforce 6:28of your vertical is 6:30who have distribution Advantage who have 6:32client relationships and that's always 6:33been true if you're a startup but now 6:36you have to double down on AI as a way 6:39to differentiate even while they're 6:41already investing in Ai and while 6:44customers expect more and more value 6:46because AI is teaching them that they 6:48need to deliver better and better 6:51quality to everyone Downstream with 6:53their value chain so for example one of 6:56the stories out of consultancy in the 6:58past year is that it used to be that you 7:00could deliver a certain quality first 7:01draft and that would be okay now what 7:05used to be the final draft is the first 7:07draft because everyone expects better 7:09with AI I think that is one of the big 7:11underlying levers for competition and 7:15differentiation in the next five years 7:17everyone is expecting more because AI is 7:19teaching us to expect more so if you are 7:21in the SAS business your customers 7:23expect more of you if you a startup your 7:26customers expect even more of you to 7:28disrupt and your customers have more 7:30expected of them to deliver value 7:32there's this cascading effect of the 7:35higher demand for Quality that AI has 7:38created that we are all just living 7:39through so where does this land us as 7:41far as SAS and margins and revenue I 7:44hope I've made the case to you I don't 7:46think SAS is dead I actually think that 7:48the existing Market valuation which is 7:51fairly high for SAS companies is roughly 7:54Justified I think that they are in a 7:56position to win an AI arms race right 7:59now 8:00I don't think that AI makes it 8:02enormously easier for startups to catch 8:06up will there be startups that catch up 8:08and displace incumbents there always 8:10have been there will be I don't think 8:13it's enormously easier right now so 8:16that's my take I actually think SAS is 8:17not dead I think SAS is doing fine I'd 8:20be curious to hear your take