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AI has created a vast new revenue opportunity for software firms. We estimate that agentic AI adds $3 trillion to the global addressable market. But seizing this opportunity requires a fundamental reinvention of both product strategy and company operating model.

This reinvention is a significant—and urgent—challenge. Although very few organizations are “vibe coding” to fully replace core platforms, many will reduce their software spending to fund AI initiatives. For many software providers, the result will be stagnation and compressed multiples.

In this new era, winning is about risk, experimentation, and being product-obsessed—behaviors more typical of a company’s founding stage. The prize for this transformation is significant: a combination of AI-fueled growth and productivity improvements that make “Rule of 60” performance (annual revenue growth plus a margin exceeding 60%) possible.

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An Internal AI Startup

To kickstart the AI transformation, CEOs must think of the business as two connected engines.

Managing the AI “startup” requires adopting or returning to a founder’s mentality. This switch is vital. It’s no coincidence that the few SaaS companies that have built strong AI businesses are often founder-led, including Intercom and Notion. CEOs who are not founders must embrace the mindset and start building. All CEOs must adjust their style as they move among the parts of the business.

It is also critical that the AI unit is judged by different metrics, or it will be suffocated by traditional SaaS optimization and cost discipline. It should have its own P&L. The split into two businesses helps create a clearer narrative for investors.

A Head Start... for Now

This optimistic strategy may seem disconnected from the current gloom around incumbent SaaS, particularly among investors. The pessimism is misplaced. Incumbent software companies have important advantages:

However, these advantages are inherently transitory: if incumbents don't build great AI products, their customers will quickly shift loyalty—and migrate data and workflows—to more innovative startups. That is why SaaS players must move forward with this twin-engine AI strategy.

The AI playbook still has many blank pages. The SaaS CEOs who seize the AI opportunity will not only write this new playbook but also capture an important share of the huge value AI is creating.