Markets / Industries / Enterprise Software
Industry view · Enterprise Software
Enterprise software is being repriced in real time. Global business-software spend is set to grow 14.7% to more than $1.4 trillion in 2026, yet the application layer just lived through a $2 trillion drawdown as investors bet that autonomous agents erode the per-seat model that built SaaS. The fight is no longer cloud-versus-on-prem; it is whether incumbents can sell the agent before a startup sells it for them.
01 · The thesis
For two decades enterprise software was priced per user per month. That model assumed software was a tool a human operated. Agentic AI breaks the assumption: when an agent does the work, the seat it occupied disappears, and revenue tied to headcount shrinks with it. The market has already started pricing this. Application software now trades at a discount to the S&P 500 for the first time on record, and seat-heavy names with weak data moats have been punished hardest — Figma down ~86%, Duolingo ~83%, Monday.com ~80% from their highs.
The incumbents' answer is to re-meter. Salesforce, ServiceNow, SAP and Microsoft are racing to sell the agent itself on consumption or per-outcome pricing — Salesforce's Agentforce passed a $1 billion run rate, and ServiceNow's Now Assist exited 2025 around $600 million ACV and is tracking toward a $1 billion-plus target for 2026, both monetized outside the seat. The winners will be those who own proprietary workflow data and a system of record agents must call; the losers are thin UI layers whose only moat was being where the human logged in.
Frontier LLMs from OpenAI, Anthropic and Google are now the reasoning engine inside every enterprise agent, turning model access into a cost-of-goods line for software vendors.
System-of-record vendors wrap models in governed, data-grounded agent runtimes and charge by consumption or outcome rather than by seat.
Copilots embedded in the daily work surface monetize the installed base but face the sharpest seat-cannibalization risk as agents absorb the tasks.
Startups attack single high-volume workflows — support, coding, finance ops — and price per resolution, directly displacing seats and BPO labor.
Agent tooling lowers the cost of replacing thin SaaS with internal builds, pressuring vendors whose value was UI convenience rather than data or distribution.
02 · Public players & exposure
We plot the listed players on two editorial axes — how exposed each is to AI disruption, against how ready its data, brand and position are to be the answer. The figures in the table are sourced; the placement is our read.
| Company | Stance | The sourced fact |
|---|---|---|
| MicrosoftMSFT | Distribution moat | Microsoft 365 Copilot reached 20 million paid seats by fiscal Q3 2026, up from 15 million the prior quarter (Microsoft, via No Jitter). |
| SalesforceCRM | Re-metering the seat | Agentforce surpassed a $1 billion annual run rate and served roughly 18,500 enterprise customers, up from 12,500 a quarter earlier (Salesforce / VentureBeat). |
| ServiceNowNOW | Workflow control tower | Now Assist exited 2025 at over $600 million in ACV and is tracking toward a $1 billion-plus AI ACV target for 2026 (ServiceNow / CX Today). |
| SAPSAP | Data-of-record moat | Two-thirds of SAP's Q4 2025 cloud orders included Business AI, and total cloud backlog hit €77 billion, up 30% YoY (SAP / ASUG). |
| IntuitINTU | AI+human verified | More than 3 million users interacted with Intuit's autonomous AI agents, with over 85% returning for repeat engagements (Intuit, FY Q2 2026). |
| Anysphere (Cursor)pvt | Fastest scaler | Cursor reached ~$1B+ ARR and raised $2.3B at a $29.3B valuation in Nov 2025, with later talk of a round near a $60B valuation (CNBC / The Next Web). |
| Sierrapvt | Seat displacer | Bret Taylor's Sierra raised $950M at a $15.8B valuation, having topped $150M ARR in eight quarters (TechCrunch / CNBC). |
| Gleanpvt | Work-AI platform | Glean raised $150M at a $7.2B valuation, up from $4.6B nine months earlier (Crunchbase News). |
| Decagonpvt | Per-resolution pricing | Decagon was valued at $4.5B after a $250M Series D and prices support agents per-conversation and per-resolution (CMSWire / Built In). |
| FigmaFIG | Seat-exposed | Figma fell about 86.5% from its 52-week high during the 2026 SaaS rout, among the hardest-hit seat-based names (24/7 Wall St). |
03 · The two clocks
Three clocks running against the per-seat model
Adoption clock. Gartner projects that 40% of enterprise applications will embed task-specific AI agents by the end of 2026, up from fewer than 5% in 2025 — an eightfold shift in a single year that resets how every vendor must package and price its product.
Spend clock. Money is still flowing in: business-software spend grows 14.7% to over $1.4 trillion in 2026, with AI accounting for a rising share of IT budgets. The growth is real, but it is concentrating toward AI applications and price increases rather than incremental seats.
Repricing clock. The market has moved faster than the P&L. Roughly $2 trillion in software market value evaporated from the late-2025 peak into early 2026, and application software now trades at a discount to the S&P 500 for the first time on record (SaaStr / Fortune).
04 · Private flagships
The companies attacking this industry AI-first, with disclosed funding where available:
The most aggressive incumbent pivot: consumption-priced agents sold on top of the CRM system of record, aiming to charge for the agent rather than lose the seat.
Agentic add-ons sold as consumption-based Assist packs across IT, HR and customer workflows, leveraging ServiceNow's position as the enterprise control tower.
AI code editor that became one of the fastest B2B software companies to scale past $1B ARR, redefining developer tooling as agent-assisted by default.
Outcome-oriented AI agents for customer interactions, founded by ex-Salesforce co-CEO Bret Taylor, attacking the support seat and BPO spend directly.
Horizontal search-and-agent platform over enterprise knowledge, positioning as the connective tissue agents need across systems.
Customer-support agents priced per-resolution — the clearest example of outcome pricing replacing the seat with a paid result.
05 · Signals
Gartner predicts 40% of enterprise apps will feature task-specific AI agents by end-2026, up from under 5% in 2025.
Roughly $2 trillion in software market cap evaporates from the peak; seat-based names like Figma, Duolingo and Monday.com fall 80%+ from highs.
For the first time on record, application software trades at a discount to the S&P 500 as investors reprice seat risk.
Salesforce Agentforce passes a $1B run rate and ServiceNow's Now Assist (over $600M ACV exiting 2025) tracks toward a $1B-plus 2026 target — agents monetized outside the seat.
Sierra raises $950M at $15.8B and SAP reports two-thirds of Q4 cloud deals carrying Business AI, confirming demand is structural.
06 · The exposure read
AI rewards clean, structured advantage and punishes friction. The line runs through who owns the data, the brand and the customer — and who is merely a step the technology can route around.
Sources
Gartner — 40% of enterprise apps with AI agents by 2026 · SaaStr — Gartner: business software spend +14.7% to $1.4T in 2026 · Fortune — the $2 trillion software wipeout · VentureBeat — Salesforce added 6,000 Agentforce customers · diginomica — Agentforce use cases now number 18,500 · CX Today — ServiceNow Now Assist AI growth · No Jitter — Microsoft 365 Copilot hits 20 million paid seats · ASUG — SAP Q4/FY2025: record cloud growth, Business AI · VentureBeat — Intuit AI agents hit 85% repeat usage · CNBC — Cursor raises $2.3B at $29.3B valuation · The Next Web — Cursor $1B ARR, later $60B talks · TechCrunch — Sierra raises $950M at $15.8B valuation · Crunchbase News — Glean $150M at $7.2B valuation · CMSWire — Decagon triples valuation to $4.5B; 24/7 Wall St SaaS rout losers