Over the past decade, a number of the big PE firms in our space decided that a “roll up the space to win” strategy was the right approach and bought a large number, and in some cases dozens, of assets in the Procurement space globally. Vista, Main, KKR, Accel-KKR, and Thoma Bravo all followed this strategy in the hopes that with enough assets, they’d control enough of the space that controls the transactions to give them a long term home inside a significant number of major corporations.
It was a great plan, and a great play at the time (as it worked out well for them), but one that may backfire for anyone who is late to the party as the Age of AI, coupled with the realization that bit pushing applications don’t cost very much anymore, means that these nine and ten figure plays are not going to maintain their market dominance, or their income stream that depends on seven figure annual subscriptions, for much longer.
As per THE PROPHET‘s recent piece on An LP, an AI Builder, and a PE Advisor Walk into a Bar, the time for the traditional players is coming to an end — especially the mega-suites that thought they could charge 7-figure license fees until the end of time. Whether or not Agentic AI can fully replace them (they can’t, by the way), the price compression is changing the game. (Especially when you’ve been warned that Now is NOT a Great Time to Buy … a Mega-Suite.)
If you don’t have time to read the piece, THE PROPHET believes that Agentic AI is going to effectively boil the ocean and cook all of the traditional plays, charging high six and seven figures a year for relatively simple tasks that can be mostly automated by these Agentic AI solutions for a tenth of the cost (until compute costs skyrocket, but still, that’s significant downward price pressure now) in the process. If you don’t trust AI, even better, since applications that were built on modern stacks in the last 5 years with the ability to wrap discrete tasks in micro-services and orchestrate them into dynamically configurable workflows that exactly match your needs, cost about a fifth of what these big plays do and do more for you. Either way, as has been indicated many times on this blog over the past, unless your Source to Pay needs are in the top 10%, you probably don’t need to be paying more than 250K for your Source to Pay.
Now, no one can see the future with clarity, everything is in flux, and we could both be wrong, but all software (like hardware) depreciates with time, tech always advances faster than we would like to think, organizations in unregulated market places under severe cost pressure are always looking for ways to cut costs, and those providers who are running on old stacks that are hard to adapt and support aren’t going to be able to keep up or keep costs low enough. There’s going to be a massive shift, and any major players not in the public sector (where contracts tend to extend beyond our professional lifetimes due to the slow pace of change in government organizations) are on the verge of shifting out of business.
So, like THE PROPHET, when it comes to the continued dominance of traditional SaaS in a big PE portfolio, I’m not buying it either.
