There’s ONLY 5 Ways to Use AI in SaaS (prove me wrong)
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Top Comments (10)
1. 1:51 - AI is your core business 2. 3:33 - AI as a feature (It's just a enhancer) 3. 5:15 - AI for building your product 4. 7:57 - AI for growing your business 5. 9:05 - AI for Operations
Feels a lot like those times people used to make mobile apps to keep up with the trends without realizing it literally could be a webapp
I am building a SaaS that fits to Category 2. I embedded LLM to explain the aggregated metrics to users (marketing and sales managers) in context of their business. Also MCP will be something to consider in the near-ish future.
Post of the month! The playing field will leveled before we know it. Keep your eye on the ball: ultimately the ones providing the best customer experience and value will win.
Use Case: enable your app to be used by AI via MCP.
I would categorize differently - by business areas of a typical company : 1. My products / services (AI as product/ as features) 2. Go to market (marketing, sales funnel,...) 3. Customer onboarding, support / satisfaction, retention 4. Operations automation / analysis / optimization - big area deserving break down
Fairly solid list, we use 2-5 to increasing degrees. AI as a feature is a bit of a catchall, but I would suggest "AI for personalization" e.g. we use AI to suggest filters, get more relevant screens and menus and to build relevant reports based on you and the data, and for contextual help - so not a new feature rather making the existing features smarter and more relevant to you.
The question I'm in is "is my company ready to use AI?" and Am I ready for AI?" and "Is it for me? It feels that the entire AI community doesn't even really understand both AI and themselves.
Pretty well structured video and I agree with all the categories you listed and with their pros and cons. It would be cool to have business ideas and opportunities for each of those categories. If it existed, I would have loved to watch that video!
You could replace AI with "software" and the categories would still hold: Software is your core business - Microsoft, Adobe, ... Software as a feature - any hardware with a software component, very popular but OTOH there are products that set themselves apart being not software-enabled Software for building your product - CAD, CAM, ..., most companies do it if they build something Software for growing your business - CRM, almost everybody does it Software for operations - almost every company does that now
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Top Comments (10)
1. 1:51 - AI is your core business 2. 3:33 - AI as a feature (It's just a enhancer) 3. 5:15 - AI for building your product 4. 7:57 - AI for growing your business 5. 9:05 - AI for Operations
Feels a lot like those times people used to make mobile apps to keep up with the trends without realizing it literally could be a webapp
I am building a SaaS that fits to Category 2. I embedded LLM to explain the aggregated metrics to users (marketing and sales managers) in context of their business. Also MCP will be something to consider in the near-ish future.
Post of the month! The playing field will leveled before we know it. Keep your eye on the ball: ultimately the ones providing the best customer experience and value will win.
Use Case: enable your app to be used by AI via MCP.
I would categorize differently - by business areas of a typical company : 1. My products / services (AI as product/ as features) 2. Go to market (marketing, sales funnel,...) 3. Customer onboarding, support / satisfaction, retention 4. Operations automation / analysis / optimization - big area deserving break down
Fairly solid list, we use 2-5 to increasing degrees. AI as a feature is a bit of a catchall, but I would suggest "AI for personalization" e.g. we use AI to suggest filters, get more relevant screens and menus and to build relevant reports based on you and the data, and for contextual help - so not a new feature rather making the existing features smarter and more relevant to you.
The question I'm in is "is my company ready to use AI?" and Am I ready for AI?" and "Is it for me? It feels that the entire AI community doesn't even really understand both AI and themselves.
Pretty well structured video and I agree with all the categories you listed and with their pros and cons. It would be cool to have business ideas and opportunities for each of those categories. If it existed, I would have loved to watch that video!
You could replace AI with "software" and the categories would still hold: Software is your core business - Microsoft, Adobe, ... Software as a feature - any hardware with a software component, very popular but OTOH there are products that set themselves apart being not software-enabled Software for building your product - CAD, CAM, ..., most companies do it if they build something Software for growing your business - CRM, almost everybody does it Software for operations - almost every company does that now