<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss version="2.0"
	xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"
	xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/"
	xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
	xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"
	xmlns:sy="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/"
	xmlns:slash="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/slash/"
	>

<channel>
	<title>Forbes &#8211; Sarah Schlott</title>
	<atom:link href="https://sarahgschlott.com/tag/forbes/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>https://sarahgschlott.com</link>
	<description>FP&#38;A Insights</description>
	<lastBuildDate>Thu, 14 Aug 2025 04:46:39 +0000</lastBuildDate>
	<language>en-US</language>
	<sy:updatePeriod>
	hourly	</sy:updatePeriod>
	<sy:updateFrequency>
	1	</sy:updateFrequency>
	

<image>
	<url>https://sarahgschlott.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/cropped-ChatGPT-Image-May-13-2025-07_00_01-PM-1-1-1-32x32.png</url>
	<title>Forbes &#8211; Sarah Schlott</title>
	<link>https://sarahgschlott.com</link>
	<width>32</width>
	<height>32</height>
</image> 
	<item>
		<title>SaaS Isn’t Dead. But the Lease Just Got Shorter.</title>
		<link>https://sarahgschlott.com/saas-isnt-dead-but-the-lease-just-got-shorter/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=saas-isnt-dead-but-the-lease-just-got-shorter</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Sarah Schlott]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 11 Aug 2025 19:57:52 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[SaaS]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Forbes]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://sarahgschlott.com/?p=4804</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[A Response to Forbes’ “SaaS Ave” Piece by Daniel Newman It was Saturday morning.The dishwasher was still humming from last night’s half-hearted “we’ll clean up later” pact. My coffee was going lukewarm. My inbox had exactly two emails: a reminder from the dentist and a link from my husband with the subject line: “Thought of [&#8230;]]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p data-start="338" data-end="397"><em data-start="338" data-end="395">A Response to Forbes’ “SaaS Ave” Piece by Daniel Newman</em></p>
<p data-start="399" data-end="661">It was Saturday morning.<br data-start="423" data-end="426" />The dishwasher was still humming from last night’s half-hearted “we’ll <a href="https://sarahgschlott.com/5-ways-excel-power-query-can-automate-your-financial-data-prep/">clean</a> up later” pact. My coffee was going lukewarm. My inbox had exactly two emails: a reminder from the dentist and a link from my husband with the subject line:</p>
<blockquote data-start="663" data-end="684">
<p data-start="665" data-end="684">“Thought of you.”</p>
</blockquote>
<p data-start="686" data-end="826">The link was a <strong data-start="701" data-end="711">Forbes</strong> article by Daniel Newman — the one currently bouncing through <a href="https://sarahgschlott.com/the-silent-killer-of-fpa-accuracy-calendar-drift/">Slack</a> channels and boardrooms like a live grenade.</p>
<p data-start="828" data-end="973">Headline gist: Big Tech <a href="https://sarahgschlott.com/the-cfos-hidden-leverage-why-stakeholder-communication-is-the-real-strategy-stack/">CEO</a> says <a href="https://sarahgschlott.com/stop-chasing-variances-why-your-fpa-team-is-solving-the-wrong-problem/">SaaS</a> is “a bad neighborhood.” The age of Agentic Platform Companies is here. Mid-market SaaS? <a href="https://sarahgschlott.com/9-ways-a-pivot-table-can-make-a-cfo-cry-in-public/">Pivot</a> or perish.</p>
<p data-start="975" data-end="1168">By paragraph two, I could already picture the fallout: rushed all-hands meetings, hastily formed “AI task forces,” and founders staring at <a href="https://sarahgschlott.com/excel-has-a-new-add-in-its-called-chatgpt/">ChatGPT</a> like it’s going to spit out a survival plan.</p>
<p data-start="1170" data-end="1349">Newman’s piece isn’t wrong. But the way it frames SaaS as condemned property misses the real story: SaaS isn’t a dying neighborhood. It’s a city in the middle of a rezoning war.</p>
<h2 data-start="1356" data-end="1388">Where Newman Gets It Right</h2>
<ul>
<li data-start="1392" data-end="1561"><strong data-start="1392" data-end="1427">The Mid-Market Squeeze Is Real.</strong><br data-start="1427" data-end="1430" />AI-native startups are eating the low end; tech giants are bundling <a href="https://sarahgschlott.com/mastering-ai-in-finance-building-expertise-for-a-data-driven-future/">AI</a> into everything and pricing the mid-tier out of relevance.</li>
<li data-start="1565" data-end="1633"><strong data-start="1565" data-end="1596">AI Features Won’t Save You.</strong><br data-start="1596" data-end="1599" />A bolt-on chatbot is not a moat.</li>
<li data-start="1637" data-end="1751"><strong data-start="1637" data-end="1665">Seat Licenses Are Dying.</strong><br data-start="1665" data-end="1668" />Outcome-based pricing will replace per-seat models just as SaaS replaced on-prem.</li>
</ul>
<p data-start="1753" data-end="1785">On these points, he’s spot on.</p>
<h2 data-start="1792" data-end="1841">Where the “Bad Neighborhood” Analogy Breaks</h2>
<p data-start="1843" data-end="2013">Calling SaaS a “bad neighborhood” sounds dramatic, but it ignores what’s actually happening: the bulldozers aren’t clearing decay — they’re making room for skyscrapers.</p>
<p data-start="2015" data-end="2185">The strip-mall era of siloed, seat-based apps is being replaced by agentic platforms where AI, cloud, and <a href="https://sarahgschlott.com/mastering-ai-in-finance-building-expertise-for-a-data-driven-future/">data</a> live in one adaptive structure delivering measurable ROI.</p>
<p data-start="2187" data-end="2296">If you own the land, you can build higher. If you rent, you’d better make friends with a developer who can.</p>
<p data-start="2298" data-end="2385">Demand for software isn’t dead. Demand for <strong data-start="2341" data-end="2379">software without provable outcomes</strong> is.</p>
<h2 data-start="2392" data-end="2420">The Kitchen Table Test</h2>
<p data-start="2422" data-end="2508">By the time I reached Newman’s section on Agentic Platforms, my husband wandered in.</p>
<p data-start="2510" data-end="2543">“What’s the verdict?” he asked.</p>
<p data-start="2545" data-end="2654">I told him: <em data-start="2557" data-end="2652">“If your AI strategy can be described in UI buttons, you’re not a company — you’re a widget.”</em></p>
<p data-start="2656" data-end="2778">That’s my kitchen-table test now: if you fail it, you’re already halfway to being absorbed into someone else’s platform.</p>
<h2 data-start="2785" data-end="2811">Behind the Headlines</h2>
<p data-start="2813" data-end="2885">I’ve been in the rooms Newman describes. The whispered investor calls:</p>
<ul>
<li data-start="2888" data-end="2956">Growth equity partners bailing unless the AI architecture is live.</li>
<li data-start="2959" data-end="3023">Founders negotiating acqui-hires they swore they’d never take.</li>
<li data-start="3026" data-end="3121">Product managers admitting their roadmap could be wiped out by a single Microsoft 365 update.</li>
</ul>
<p data-start="3123" data-end="3228">One mid-market SaaS walked me through its AI plan: “Predictive” dashboards and smarter search. I asked:</p>
<p data-start="3230" data-end="3319"><strong data-start="3230" data-end="3317">“If OpenAI gave away 80% of your functionality tomorrow, what’s left that’s yours?”</strong></p>
<p data-start="3321" data-end="3382">Silence. Then: <em data-start="3336" data-end="3380">“We’d probably get acquired. Or fade out.”</em></p>
<p data-start="3384" data-end="3454">That’s the uncomfortable reality the Forbes piece only brushed past.</p>
<h2 data-start="3461" data-end="3493">The Real Survival Playbook</h2>
<ol data-start="3495" data-end="3862">
<li data-start="3495" data-end="3594">
<p data-start="3498" data-end="3594"><strong data-start="3498" data-end="3529">Make AI the Operating Core.</strong><br data-start="3529" data-end="3532" />If AI can replicate your differentiator, you don’t have one.</p>
</li>
<li data-start="3596" data-end="3666">
<p data-start="3599" data-end="3666"><strong data-start="3599" data-end="3621">Price on Outcomes.</strong><br data-start="3621" data-end="3624" />Seats are dead. ROI is the new currency.</p>
</li>
<li data-start="3668" data-end="3766">
<p data-start="3671" data-end="3766"><strong data-start="3671" data-end="3689">Own Your Data.</strong><br data-start="3689" data-end="3692" />Without unique, defensible data, you’re a tenant in someone else’s city.</p>
</li>
<li data-start="3768" data-end="3862">
<p data-start="3771" data-end="3862"><strong data-start="3771" data-end="3793">Purge the Zombies.</strong><br data-start="3793" data-end="3796" />Kill every non-core feature draining oxygen from AI development.</p>
</li>
</ol>
<h2 data-start="3869" data-end="3896">The Giants’ Quiet War</h2>
<p data-start="3898" data-end="4028">Newman’s right about the winners: Microsoft, <a href="https://sarahgschlott.com/top-10-principles-for-transforming-fpa-towards-long-term-value-creation/">Google</a>, Palantir, Salesforce, Oracle. But the reason isn’t vision — it’s execution.</p>
<p data-start="4030" data-end="4170">They bundle AI into everything, undercut on pricing, and use distribution moats so wide the mid-tier never even makes it to the shortlist.</p>
<p data-start="4285" data-end="4380">That’s the <a href="https://sarahgschlott.com/how-a-120-year-old-company-unlocked-forecasting-value/">board</a> you’re playing on. And most mid-market players are still opening with pawns.</p>
<h2 data-start="4387" data-end="4417">Why This Isn’t a Funeral</h2>
<p data-start="4419" data-end="4516">Daniel Newman’s “bad neighborhood” line will get all the clicks. But it’s not the full picture.</p>
<p data-start="4518" data-end="4648">This isn’t a funeral — it’s a zoning revolution. Yes, some companies will end up in the rubble. But others will own the skyline.</p>
<p data-start="4650" data-end="4759">The winners are already rebuilding: AI in the core, outcomes in the price tag, and unique data as the moat.</p>
<p data-start="4761" data-end="4836">SaaS isn’t dead. But the lease just got shorter, and the rent’s going up.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
			</item>
	</channel>
</rss>
