SaaS company valuations in the first week of February 2026 saw a massive selloff. In seven days, over $1 trillion in market capitalization was erased from software stocks. The selloff was triggered by the incredible pace of AI agent innovation because the market is betting on a massive shift of how work gets done and the perception that AI threatens to replace software workflows.

Investors are fleeing because of fears that: 1. SaaS companies won’t be the provider of choice for AI agents; 2. their traditional per-seat model will become obsolete which will lead to revenue declines; 3. vibe coding will allow startups to replicate features of complex SaaS platforms, eroding their moat; and 4. SaaS products are fundamentally too complex and users struggle to manage “SaaS sprawl” of hundreds of applications that don’t talk to each other. Investors are betting that AI native companies will solve all these issues.

Not so fast. Today, enterprises spend tens if not hundreds of millions of dollars on SaaS software for core capabilities across the front, middle, and back-office workflows and global SaaS spending is projected to rise from $318B (2025) to $512B (2028) and $576B (2029), underscoring that the enterprise core isn’t vanishing, even as it transforms. These functions are not going to disappear overnight. “Death of the core” and “Death of SaaS” is overstated. The brain of the enterprise remains, the central nervous system is evolving, and the center of gravity is becoming more intelligent. There are two factors to consider—the economic and operational relationships between vendors and customers—and two questions to answer: 1. What will happen to the SaaS ecosystem? and 2. How buyers should respond to the AI challenge? Forrester breaks this down clearly and responsibly.

The SaaS-pocalypse Ushers In An Era of Collapse And Consolidation For SaaS Vendors

Not all SaaS companies will fare badly in an AI-first world. Forrester predicts that:

  • Horizontal point solution SaaS vendors will be challenged. Vendors with low switching costs and weak, non-embedded enterprise workflows will not scale beyond their current customer base. Those that don’t provide immediate, tangible ROI will lose their funding and clientele. Some niche AI-native players will likely be consumed by larger, more durable, or incumbent vendors (example Nice’s acquisition of Conversational AI vendor Cognigy).
  • Vertical, or domain-specific SaaS vendors will have a greater chance of survival. This market is already large and expanding, with vertical software projected to grow from roughly $133.5B (2025) to $194.0B (2029F). SaaS vendors that offer differentiated solutions that address complex industries (e.g., healthcare, manufacturing) or that control unique, proprietary data will survive. EPIC and Cerner for electronic healthcare record management, IQVIA for pharmaceuticals and life sciences provide specialization than the “simple” SaaS tools who might be starting to feel the evaporating demand.
  • Enterprise SaaS companies are racing to become AI companies; they still risk disintermediation. Vendors like Salesforce, ServiceNow, Oracle will shift to become AI-first companies. They are rapidly embedding AI agents alongside deterministic processes, especially for regulated industries. This pivot is real and happening now. These incumbents are leveraging AppGen capabilities for AI modernization to move up the stack. They will attempt to preserve their moat using what is hard for AI-only companies to replicate: deep vertical experience building specialized solutions, their deep bench of consulting partners; access to vast customer data for benchmarking and machine learning, and the integration of people, process, tech and governance. However, as agentic control planes, orchestration layers, and semantic data layers increasingly sit above these suites, even AI-first SaaS vendors face growing risk of disintermediation.

How To React To The AI Challenge

The reaction should NOT be buy more AI, at least not right away. Spend time re-architecting your current investments. Your enterprise core operations runs on SaaS software (think CRM, ERP, HCM, Supply Chain). You also use a wide swath of non-essential SaaS solutions to fill the gaps that are not addressed by business application vendors. Our guidance includes:

  1. Rearchitect and reposition your SaaS investments. Don’t purchase new SaaS without a clear understanding of how it will integrate or anchor your enterprise AI strategy. Discuss the value exchange with vendors, their product lifecycle, benefits, and AI capability roadmap. Double down on digital maturity efforts to achieve a clean core, a governed and unified data fabric, and reduce the number of SaaS vendors you engage with to just your strategic partners.  Remediate tech debt and manage redundancy like inventory SaaS solutions. The Forrester REAP model helps orgs update existing assessment frameworks and address the realities of cloud expansion and the AI takeover; Understand the ratio of business differentiation and utility capabilities that can easily be replaced with AI.
  2. Prioritize an AI Agent roadmap. Work with Ecosystem Partners to identify best investment scenarios. Specify workflows that can be offloaded to AI agents. Here, you have choices on how to deploy AI agents – via tooling that SaaS vendors or digital process automation vendors are beginning to provide, or by leveraging hyperscaler toolkits, or by deploying one of the thousands of best-in-breed AI agent platforms. There are pros and cons to each choice. Irrespective of your choice, it will erode the remit of your current enterprise SaaS applications. Bring discipline and sound accounting principles to managing their benefits. Establish new roles to create and supervise AI agents so they meet productivity, velocity, and quality outcomes.
  3. Renegotiate contacts with enterprise SaaS vendors. SaaS vendor contracts are primarily based on seats. This will shift to consumption (and even outcome based) pricing as AI agents are deployed. Some vendors offer flex credits to use across seats and AI agents to encourage AI adoption. Others will offer models to shift current contracts to include AI agents. Do your homework carefully to understand cost implications.
  4. Involve partners ecosystems early and often. The shift from enterprise SaaS to agentic operations is in its infancy. Partners are on the forefront of this innovation wave. Lean on your partners to understand current best practices that align with your strategic direction. This often includes co-innovation models where partners, SaaS vendors and you collaborate for shared gains.

Connect with Forrester experts at Inquiry@forrester.com for by your side guidance to plan the SaaS to AI transformation, for insights into the future of specific SaaS vendors, and methods to rearchitect SaaS investments and optimize contracts.