The SaaSpocalypse wasn’t caused by AI, but it will be perpetuated by AI.
The narrative is: AI arrived. Revenue stalled. Therefore customers are buying fewer seats because they’re implementing AI.
$300B in market value evaporates.
The narrative has reached the capital markets too. Last quarter, Blue Owl investors requested return of $5.4 billion across two private credit funds, redemption rates of 40.7% and 21.9% respectively. KKR, Apollo, BlackRock followed by invoking their 5%/quarter withdrawal gates. Blue Owl attributed the pressure to “heightened market concerns around AI-related disruption to software companies.”
It’s a vivid and compelling narrative serving everyone involved and is mostly wrong.
Businesses across industries stopped growing headcount three years ago. Here’s the seasonally adjusted, non-farm job openings & hires against interest rates since 2000.

Narrative fallacy (Taleb): the mind’s compulsion to construct causal stories from loosely related events. Strongest under uncertainty, when a vivid explanation is unavailable and the actual cause is diffuse and banal.
Post hoc ergo propter hoc: e.g. “after this, therefore because of this.” It is the fallacy underlying most financial news narratives (“stocks rose on news that…”), most earnings call explanations, and apparently most SaaSpocalypse postmortems.
The non-farm hire rate peaked in early 2022 at the top of the post-COVID snap-back. Then it has steadily, continuously, fallen for three years. In February 2026 it sat at 3.1, nearing the lows of the 2008 financial crisis. This decline was well underway before Claude Code existed (Feb 2025) and before Klarna made headlines ditching Salesforce (Sep 2024).
Recently Fast Company posited SaaSpocalypse a myth, arguing enterprise software is so engrained in thei too deeply to be replaced by general-purpose agents.
The question is not whether AI can replace Salesforce with a homegrown solution because it’s too operationally ensconced.
The question is whether the companies running Salesforce are growing their human sales force and purchasing more seat licenses. The JOLTS data suggests they’re not – and haven’t for nearly 4 years.
Seat-based SaaS revenue is a function of customer headcount. When your customers stop hiring, they also stop buying the follow-on tools and amenities supporting the new employees. Office chairs, laptops, Office365 licenses, etc.
Unfortunately it’s seats that are ensconced. Seats are in the revenue forecast, in the sales quotas, in the board expectations, in the investor guidance. The entire operating system of a enterprise SaaS business is calibrated to a number the company does not control and never did: its customers’ hiring plans.
When hiring grew reliably through the 2010s, this tension was invisible. Seat expansion looked like product-market fit. It was, in part, just a rising labor market expressing itself through software licenses.
Many SaaS companies are now pivoting to outcome-based or consumption-based pricing (this was all my 2025 client work). Both models realign pricing with customers’ economics rather than their headcount. A dollar of ARR anchored to customer economics is more durable than a dollar of ARR anchored to a seat count in a contracting labor market. ARR still matters.
This is not a new.
Probably have been this way all along.
The headcount shrinkage has already happened.
Tech layoffs tracked by layoffs.fyi peaked at 264,000 in 2023, then decelerated: 153,000 in 2024, 124,000 in 2025, 41,000 so far in 2026. The acute phase is largely over. As you can see from the graph above, hiring has not rebounded across sectors. What remains is structurally lower hiring floor, because the companies doing the laying off stopped backfilling. Low-fire, low-hire, and no new seat licenses.
Suggesting the Saaspocalypse isn’t today, or in 2026, it’s forward-looking. Not because the SaaS companies have poor fundamentals or shrinking margins, but because their customers, and the US economy overall, stopped growing jobs.
My bet is not that “AI will disrupt SaaS”. My bet, is “companies will get smaller”.
Fewer employees than yesterday.
Quarter after quarter.
Moving forward, yes, some part we can blame on the productivity enhancements of AI. Hell, I’m planning to leverage AI in my business as much as I can ahead of hiring a person.
But, $300B in market value in 2025? No. AI is not that good yet.
