For one thing, the threat model assumes customers can build their own tools. Our end users can't. Their current "system" is Excel. The big enterprises that employ them have thousands of devs, but two of them explicitly cloned our product and tried to poach their own users onto it. One gave up. The other's users tell us it's crap. We've lost zero paying subscribers to free internal alternatives.
I believe that agents are a multiplier on existing velocity, not an equalizer. We use agents heavily and ship faster than ever. We get a lot of feedback from users as to what the internal tech teams are shipping and based on this there's little evidence of any increase in velocity from them.
The bottleneck is still knowing what to build, not building. A lot of the value in our product is in decisions users don't even know we made for them. Domain expertise + tight feedback loop with users can't be replicated by an internal developer in an afternoon.
If your answer is "cost of developing code" (what TFA argues), please explain how previous waves of reducing cost of code (JVM, IDEs, post-Y2K Outsourcing) disrupted the ERP/b2b market. Oh wait, they didn't. The only real disruption in ERP in the last what 30 years, has been Cloud. Which is an economics disruption, not a technological one: cloud added complexity and points of failure and yet it still disrupted a ton of companies, because it enabled new business models (SaaS for one).
So far, the only disruption I can see coming from LLMs is middleware/integration where it could possibly simplify complexity and reduce overall costs, which if anything will help SaaS (reduction of cost of complements, classic Christensen).
> what do LLMs disrupt? If your answer is "cost of developing code" (what TFA argues), please explain how previous waves of reducing cost of code (JVM, IDEs, post-Y2K Outsourcing) disrupted the ERP/b2b market. Oh wait, they didn't. The only real disruption in ERP in the last what 30 years, has been Cloud.
"Cost of developing code" is a trivial and incomplete answer.
Coding LLMs disrupt (or will, in the immediate future)
(1) time to develop code (with cost as a second order effect)
(2) expertise to develop code
None of the analogs you provided are a correct match for these.
A closer match would be Excel.
It improved the speed and lowered the expertise required to do what people had previously been doing.
And most importantly, as a consequence of especially the latter more types of people could leverage computing to do more of their work faster.
The risk to B2B SaaS isn't that a neophyte business analyst is going to recreate you app overnight...
... the risk is that 500+ neophyte business analysts each have a chance of replacing your SaaS app, every day, every year.
Because they only really need to get lucky once, and then the organization shifts support to in-house LLM-augmented development.
The only reason most non-technology businesses didn't do in-house custom development thus far was that ROI on employing a software development team didn't make sense for them. Suddenly that's no longer a blocker.
To the point about cloud, what did it disrupt?
(1) time to deploy code (with cost as a second order effect)
(2) expertise to deploy code
B2B SaaS should be scared, unless they're continuously developing useful features, have a deep moat, and are operating at volumes that allow them to be priced competitively.
Coding agents and custom in-house development are absolutely going to kill the 'X-for-Y' simple SaaS clone business model (anything easily cloneable).