How AI is Poised to Disrupt the B2B and SaaS Middle Market
There’s a realization dawning on B2B leaders, often unspoken: AI is not just altering the competitive field—it’s redefining who they compete with.
The competition has broadened dramatically. Entities once deemed non-threatening, outdated, or insignificant are re-emerging as formidable rivals.
Much focus is on obvious AI developments: model enhancements, AI integrations, and the race to outpace AI disruption. Yet, there’s a subtler shift quietly transforming B2B software competition.
AI is Revitalizing Unexpected Competitors.
This includes two overlooked groups: (1) outdated giants long dismissed, and (2) small startups lacking the resources to match comprehensive platforms.
Both are now outperforming expectations. Here’s why—and its implications for your approach.
The Renaissance Effect: Legacy Platforms Revived by AI
Consider the industry veterans—platforms that have existed since the early tech era, based on pre-smartphone architectures, largely forgotten as competition.
Example: Zendesk’s Unassuming AI Revival
Take Zendesk, a longstanding platform previously viewed as obsolete. While new customer service solutions emerged, Zendesk was enhancing their infrastructure with AI.
The outcome? Their AI is exceptional, making their dated platform seem quite modern. Customers who might have switched are realizing Zendesk’s AI-enhanced features outperform newer competitors lacking such AI.
This illustrates the Renaissance Effect. AI can rejuvenate supposedly outdated platforms, making them not just contenders but occasionally superior to new solutions missing advanced AI capabilities.
The Genesys Transformation: From 1990 to $2B ARR with 35% Growth
Observe this effect in action with Genesys.
Founded pre-web and pre-Amazon, Genesys was lost in the transition to cloud computing, epitomizing a legacy dinosaur in a shrinking on-premise landscape.
Now, Genesys boasts $2B+ ARR, growing 35% yearly. Recent funding from Salesforce and ServiceNow—firms capable of developing rival solutions—underscores their value.
How? AI has transformed them from a legacy player to an AI-centric customer experience leader. Their years of accumulated data and know-how became AI assets rather than liabilities.
The Small vs. Large AI Amplifier
Meanwhile, AI is empowering the smallest players like in early SaaS days.
AI Filling the Feature Gap
Previously, small startups couldn’t match established platforms due to lacking features. The feature gap was too vast.
AI changes this. A smart AI can handle complex workflows that once required extensive development, bridging integration gaps, automating tasks, and offering advanced features with minimal traditional engineering.
New Minimum Viable Product
Barriers to entry are rapidly reducing. Startups that needed vast resources and time can now launch viable products swiftly by mastering AI.
This spans categories:
- Sales tools where AI simplifies complex automation
- Customer service where AI agents surpass rule-based systems
- Marketing where AI generates creative content cost-effectively
- Analytics where AI improves data insights over handmade dashboards
The Vulnerable Mid-Market Challenge
The scenario intensifies for mid-market SaaS leaders.
Pincer Movement
They’re caught between pressures:
- From above: Legacy players with AI-enhanced experience
- Below: Agile startups with AI-driven designs and lean models
Feature Parity Dilemma
Traditional moats like feature diversity and enterprise-grade capabilities are weakening when AI can replicate these qualities. Customers increasingly opt for AI intelligence over expansive features.
Changing Switching Costs
AI simplifies migration and workflow replication, reducing switching costs. Long-term customers may now consider alternatives as AI eases transition burdens.
Strategic Implications
1. Rethink Competitor Analysis
Legacy platforms labeled “obsolete” and startups
