Anish Acharya
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I heard it called SaaSpocalypse today.
It's very funny.
It's very funny.
Bloomberg is trying to get that to stick.
Bloomberg is trying to get that to stick.
Look, if you look at SaaS spend today, if you look at IT spend overall, it's 8% to 12% of enterprise spend, okay?
Look, if you look at SaaS spend today, if you look at IT spend overall, it's 8% to 12% of enterprise spend, okay?
So even if you vibe-coded your ERP and your payroll with all the kind of risks and dangers that that entails, you're going to save 8% to 12%.
So even if you vibe-coded your ERP and your payroll with all the kind of risks and dangers that that entails, you're going to save 8% to 12%.
You have this innovation bazooka with these models.
You have this innovation bazooka with these models.
Why would you point it at rebuilding payroll or ERP or CRM?
Why would you point it at rebuilding payroll or ERP or CRM?
You're going to take it and use it to extend your core advantage as a business, or you're going to take it to optimize the other 90% that you're not spending on software today.
You're going to take it and use it to extend your core advantage as a business, or you're going to take it to optimize the other 90% that you're not spending on software today.
So I just think that, of course, there will be secular losers.
So I just think that, of course, there will be secular losers.
There are specific business models that are now going to be disadvantaged.
There are specific business models that are now going to be disadvantaged.
But I think the general story that we're going to vibe code everything is flat wrong, and the whole market is oversold software.