AI Labor Is Not SaaS

For twenty years, software investors underwrote a simple assumption: software scales better than labor. SaaS sold access to reusable code. Add another customer, seat, or department, and the marginal cost was close to zero. That was the economic magic behind 80–90% gross margins, high net retention, and the valuation framework that built modern enterprise software.

AI agents complicate that assumption. They are software, but they behave economically like labor. Every completed task carries a cost: inference, tool calls, orchestration, retrieval, verification, retries, exception handling, and sometimes human escalation. In traditional SaaS, usage was mostly evidence of retention. In agentic AI, usage is also a cost event.

The obvious story is that AI agents will replace seats. Why pay for fifty users when one person with agents can do the same work? That story is directionally right, but it misses the harder question. Replacing seats does not automatically create a better business model. A seat is predictable revenue. Work is variable cost.

That is the agent margin trap. Outcomes-based pricing sounds elegant: pay per resolved ticket, qualified lead, invoice processed, or claim reviewed. The customer only pays when value is delivered. But alignment is not the same as margin. An agentic AI company that sells more outcomes also takes on more work, more model calls, more edge cases, more failed attempts, and more dispute risk over whether the outcome was actually achieved.

The bull case is that inference costs will fall. They will. But inference is only the visible cost of autonomy. The hidden costs are verification, exception handling, trust, and liability. Those do not automatically collapse with GPU prices. In many workflows, they become the real cost center.

This is why the key diligence question for agentic AI companies is changing. It is not how much ARR they have, how many workflows they automate, or how accurate the model is. The real question is: what is the contribution margin per outcome after inference, tools, orchestration, verification, exceptions, and human escalation?

If that number does not improve with scale, the company is not AI-native SaaS. It is tech-enabled services with a better interface.

The best agentic AI companies will operate in domains where the work is frequent, narrow, measurable, repeatable, and low-liability. Customer support resolution, invoice processing, compliance documentation, sales research, data enrichment, claims triage, and recruiting screening are good examples. In these markets, success can be defined, failure can be measured, exceptions can be reduced, and margins can improve.

The weakest agentic AI companies will operate where the work is ambiguous, judgment-heavy, high-liability, and hard to verify. Strategy, complex legal advice, medical decisioning, financial planning, enterprise sales, and executive recruiting may demo well, but scale poorly. The edge cases become the product. The exception queue becomes the company.

Investors are trying to value AI labor with SaaS multiples. But labor and software are different economic objects. Software scales by replication. Labor scales by execution. SaaS monetized access. Agents monetize work.

The next great AI companies will not be the ones that automate the most work. They will be the ones that automate the most profitable work.

AI does not kill SaaS. It forces us to ask a better question: is this software, or is this labor with an API?

The $330B Lie: Why Record VC Funding Means Nothing for 99% of Founders

The headlines all said the same thing in Q1 2026: venture capital is back. Global VC hit $330.9 billion — a record. Founders read those
numbers and walked into fundraising meetings expecting a warm market. Most of them got a cold one.

Here's what the headline didn't say: five companies captured 63% of it.

OpenAI ($122B), Anthropic ($30.6B), xAI ($20B), Waymo ($16B), Databricks ($7B). Strip those five out and you're left with a market
that funded 3,700 seed rounds — down 31% year-over-year. Fewer founders got money in Q1 2026 than in Q1 2025. They just got slightly bigger checks. That is not a recovery. That is a redistribution.

THE BIFURCATION IS NOW STRUCTURAL

This isn't a cycle. It's a structural split that has been widening since 2023 and is now essentially permanent.

At the top: a small number of enormous bets on frontier AI infrastructure. These are not venture deals in the traditional sense —
they're closer to sovereign-scale capital allocation, backed by sovereign wealth funds, Big Tech strategic dollars, and multi-stage firms that have effectively become growth equity players. The returns logic is winner-take-most at the model layer; the check sizes reflect that. Andreessen, Sequoia, and Coatue aren't debating whether to write $100M+ into foundation model companies. That decision is already made.

At the bottom: a seed market that is nominally functioning but quietly contracting. Median seed check sizes are up — which sounds good until you realize it means fewer bets are being made at higher prices for the same (or lower) quality of company. Accelerators are competing for deal flow that used to go directly to seed funds. Pre-seed has essentially collapsed as a distinct category. Angels are more
selective. The total number of new companies getting funded is shrinking.

In the middle: nothing. The Series A and B market for non-AI companies or AI companies that can't clearly articulate their infrastructure
or distribution moat — has dried up. "AI-enabled" is no longer a fundraising thesis. It's a feature description.

WHAT THIS MEANS FOR FOUNDERS

If you are building a foundation model or critical AI infrastructure : compute, training data, inference optimization, safety tooling, you
are in the hot zone. Capital is abundant. Valuations are generous. Your problem is not fundraising; it's execution and defensibility.

If you are building anything else, you are in a different market entirely. Not a bad market, but a more honest one. Here's what that
market looks like:

Revenue matters again. Not ARR projections. Not letter-of-intent pipelines. Not "we have 12 enterprise pilots." Actual recurring
revenue, with actual retention. Seed investors in 2024-2025 tolerated a lot of hand-waving on this. They're tolerating much less now.

Efficiency is back as a signal. Burn multiples are scrutinized. The "we'll figure out unit economics at scale" pitch died somewhere in
2023 and has not been revived. If your CAC/LTV math doesn't work at current scale, you need a credible story for when it will — not a
PowerPoint slide that says "as we grow."

The bar for the Series A has quietly risen. The median Series A in Q1 2026 required demonstrable product-market fit, not just early traction signals. Many founders who raised seed rounds in 2021-2022 and assumed an 18-month path to A are discovering that the goalposts moved while they were heads-down building. The A now requires what the B used to require.

THE PSYCHOLOGY PROBLEM

The real damage from misleading headline numbers isn't the founders who fundraise without checking assumptions — it's the founders who don't fundraise when they should, because they assume the market is flush and they can wait for better terms.

If you have 12 months of runway and are waiting for a better window, this is your window. The "record funding" era is not trickling down.
The five mega-deals that inflated Q1 are one-time events tied to geopolitical dynamics (US government relationships with OpenAI and
Anthropic), strategic imperatives (Google and Microsoft), and a specific moment in the AI platform cycle that will not repeat at the
same scale. Q2 and Q3 will look different.

For investors, the psychology problem cuts the other way. A number of micro-funds and emerging managers are still pricing deals as if
they're competing in the bull market. They're not. Valuation discipline matters again, and the LPs writing checks into new fund
formations are asking harder questions about deployment pace and mark-to-market honesty than they were two years ago.

THE ACTUAL OPPORTUNITY

Here's the contrarian read that most people are missing: a smaller, more honest seed market is a better seed market for good companies.

When fewer companies get funded, the ones that do get more attention. Competition for engineering talent softens. Customer acquisition costs decline as the noise from under-funded competitors decreases. Enterprise buyers, burned by over-promising AI vendors in 2024, are now more receptive to products that do one thing well rather than platforms that promise to do everything.

The founders who raised in 2021-2022 at inflated valuations on thin traction are now your best case studies in what not to do — and the
clearest signal that the current correction is rational, not cruel.

The $330B number is real. It just doesn't belong to you. Build accordingly.

Access Is a Social Moat. Detection Is a Computational Moat

Samir Kaji recently reignited an important conversation about venture capital. A follow-up piece in Venture Notes, titled “The VC Playbook Has Changed… But Not Equally for Everyone,” argues that while AI has expanded the ceiling of outcomes, the structural advantages remain concentrated among Tier 1 funds with privileged access.

The logic is compelling. Venture capital is still governed by power laws. A small number of companies will generate the overwhelming majority of returns. AI may produce larger outcomes than previous cycles, but unless a fund consistently gains access to those rare companies, the traditional venture math still applies. In that world, brand, proximity, and elite networks continue to matter most.

I agree with much of this analysis. But I believe the more important question is not whether the ceiling has expanded. It is whether the moat has changed.

For decades, access has been the defining moat in venture capital. Proximity to Stanford or MIT. Embeddedness in founder networks. Brand gravity that attracts the strongest entrepreneurs. Access is fundamentally a social moat.

But AI is quietly reshaping another dimension of the industry: detection. And detection is a computational moat.

Much of the current debate focuses on magnitude: larger markets, bigger companies, higher valuations. Yet the more structural shift may be time compression. AI startups differ from prior generations in three key ways. They are more capital efficient. They reach meaningful revenue more quickly. And they distribute globally from day one.

If exit timelines compress from twelve years to six, the economics of venture capital change dramatically. A 10x return over twelve years implies roughly a 21 percent internal rate of return. The same 10x outcome over six years implies closer to 47 percent IRR. That difference alone reshapes fund construction.

Under compressed cycles, you no longer need a single 100x outlier to drive performance. A portfolio of disciplined 8–15x outcomes within shorter timelines can generate exceptional returns. The power law does not disappear, but it becomes denser. The distribution thickens in the middle.

This is where an AI-native fund becomes structurally different.

Most venture firms remain human-limited systems. Sourcing depends on warm introductions and inbound flow. Screening relies on partner memory and qualitative judgment. Portfolio construction follows long-standing heuristics. An AI-native fund instead treats sourcing and scoring as continuous, probabilistic processes.

Rather than waiting for founders to pitch, it monitors real-time signals: GitHub velocity, hiring graph expansion, API usage growth, enterprise traction, technical co-founder networks, and semantic similarity to historical breakout companies. Discovery lag collapses.

Earlier detection leads to lower entry prices, stronger ownership positions, and faster DPI timing. That is not incremental operational improvement; it is structural alpha.

The Venture Notes argument assumes access remains scarce and durable. That may hold for frontier AI labs. But across applied AI, vertical SaaS, infrastructure, robotics, and AI-enabled hardware, information asymmetry is shrinking. High-signal founders leave data exhaust long before demo day. Technical velocity surfaces in public repositories. Community adoption is measurable in real time.

The next Tier 1 fund may not be the most connected. It may be the most computational.

This does not eliminate human judgment. Venture remains an art. But capital allocation can become partially algorithmic without losing its qualitative core. Portfolio construction can move from rules of thumb toward probabilistic optimization: precision at the top of ranked opportunities, founder quality thresholds, regime detection across market cycles, and dynamic reserve allocation informed by updated signals.

The deeper debate, then, is not simply whether the venture playbook has changed. It is whether information asymmetry is still defensible.

If access remains the primary moat, the existing hierarchy persists. AI tools become incremental improvements layered onto a social network model. But if detection becomes the decisive moat, the hierarchy shifts. Structural advantage migrates from proximity and brand toward data and computation.

Access is a social moat. Detection is a computational moat.

An AI-native fund is a deliberate bet on the latter. And in a world defined by compressed cycles and accelerating signal formation, that bet may matter more than legacy status.

The AI Margin Tax: Why SaaS Math Breaks for Venture

Venture capital runs on a simple lie we all tell ourselves: if revenue is going up and the product feels inevitable, the unit economics will sort themselves out later.

That lie worked in SaaS because “later” mostly meant: keep shipping, keep selling, and your marginal cost asymptotically goes to zero. Serving the 10,000th user was basically free. So you could fund growth first, then let operating leverage do its thing.

AI breaks that bargain.

Not because the tech isn’t real. Because the cost structure is. Every useful action can carry a variable compute bill. If you don’t model that bill at the level where value is actually delivered, you can build something that looks like a rocket ship and still never produce a venture outcome.

The trap is subtle: we’re pricing AI startups with SaaS heuristics.

“SaaS” implies 80–90% gross margins, predictable renewals, and the comforting idea that once you’ve built the product, delivering it is just bits on a wire. A lot of AI companies are selling outcomes powered by rented intelligence. That means inference is not a rounding error. It’s COGS. And COGS that scales with usage changes everything: pricing, fundraising, valuation, and the revenue you need in 8–10 years to generate real returns.

So what should you measure?

Not “blended gross margin.” That’s too easy to game, especially early when usage is volatile and you can hide subsidies inside a single line item. The metric that matters is:

Contribution margin per AI-driven action.

Pick the atomic unit your customer pays for: a document processed, a claim adjudicated, a sales email generated, a security alert resolved, a customer ticket deflected. Then do the unglamorous accounting: revenue for that action minus inference, retrieval, tooling, human-in-the-loop, and support. If that number is negative, you’re not scaling a product. You’re scaling a cost.

Negative contribution margin isn’t always fatal. But it demands a very specific story: a short, owned path to positive margins via model routing, caching, distillation, cheaper model mixes, better retrieval, product constraints, and—most importantly—pricing that captures value rather than compute consumption.

If your plan is “inference will get cheaper,” you’re speculating on an industry-wide cost curve you don’t control. Even if you’re right, your competitors get the same benefit. That’s not a moat. That’s weather.

This is where the “AI margin tax” shows up.

In the SaaS world, $100M ARR with high margins could translate into a clean unicorn-plus outcome. In AI, $100M ARR with materially lower margins often gets a materially lower multiple. Same revenue. Different business. Different valuation. This is why so many founders are confused right now: they hit impressive top-line numbers and still get treated like the exit is capped.

Investors need to internalize this because it changes portfolio construction. Venture is a power law; a small number of outcomes carry the fund. That means your “winners” must be huge, not just successful. And huge is a function of exit value, which is a function of revenue and margin profile.

If you’re investing at pre-seed and underwriting SaaS-style multiples on SaaS-style margins, but the company is actually a 25–60% gross margin business, you’re quietly chopping your upside in half. You can’t make that up with vibes.

Now the question founders always ask: what revenue do we need in 8–10 years for venture returns?

Annoying answer: it depends on the multiple you can justify at exit, and the multiple you can justify depends on whether you look like a durable software business or a variable-cost services machine.

A practical way to think about it:

If you want a venture outcome, you likely need to be on a path to $200M–$500M ARR (US and global from day one targets) within a decade and demonstrate a credible march toward 70%+ gross margins, strong retention, and defensibility. Yes, there are exceptions, category leaders can command premiums. But if your gross margin stalls below 50–60%, you’ll need far more revenue to hit the same exit value, and buyers may still cap the multiple because the business doesn’t scale cleanly.

So what changes in fundraising?

For founders: stop leading with architecture and benchmarks. Lead with business model physics. Show contribution margin per action today, the levers that improve it, and the milestones where cost curves bend. Your deck should make it obvious you’re building leverage, not just shipping intelligence.

For investors: stop asking “how fast can this grow?” as the first question. Ask “what happens to gross margin at 10x usage?” Ask “who owns the cost curve?” Ask “if your model provider changes pricing, what breaks?” Then price the round like you believe the answers.

And here’s the uncomfortable conclusion: many AI startups should not be venture-backed.

If your TAM is modest, switching costs are low, margins won’t clear 60%+, and revenue scales linearly with compute or headcount, you may still build a great company. It just might be a bootstrapped company, a profitable niche business, or a strategic acquisition—not a fund-returning outcome.

AI doesn’t kill venture. It kills lazy venture math.

The new rule is brutally simple: if contribution margin per AI-driven action is unclear, negative, or “we’ll fix it later,” you’re not building a venture-scale asset. You’re building an increasingly expensive demo.

And the market eventually always collects.