The future of SaaS is hazy and no one really knows what comes next

There was a time when SaaS felt predictable. You built something useful, scaled it, and charged a subscription. If the software did well enough, growth followed. It wasn’t easy, but it was clear. There was a sense of direction, a playbook that most companies seemed to follow, tweak, and succeed with. Ironically enough, the same playbook gave birth to numerous tech giants as we know them today.

Now, that clarity feels different. Not entirely gone, but blurred. If you work in SaaS, you can feel it. There’s a subtle shift, one that isn’t loud enough to make headlines, but strong enough to change how things feel day to day.

Things aren’t as straightforward anymore; maybe that’s because they aren’t. We often look back at the earlier days of SaaS as simpler times. Less competition and complexity, more demand, and faster growth. But maybe what we’re really remembering is its momentum.

When everything around you is expanding, it’s easy to mistake movement for certainty. It feels like you’re on the right path simply because things are constantly moving. Today, the landscape feels more crowded than ever. There are tools for everything—and then tools for those tools. Every product promises efficiency, transformation, or scale. But from the outside, it’s becoming harder to tell them apart; from the inside, it’s becoming harder to truly stand out.

At the same time, expectations are rising. AI is redefining what good looks like. Customers are more aware, more selective. Budgets are tighter. Decisions take longer. Growth alone doesn’t impress anymore.

That is where the haze begins.

Not because SaaS is failing, but because the rules are changing.  There’s no guaranteed formula that works across the board. What worked before might still work but it’s no longer enough to succeed and become a tech giant.

For SaaS companies, this creates an uncomfortable reality. Being good is now the baseline. A clean product, a strong feature set, a decent user experience, these are all expected one step above the prototype of a product.

What actually matters now is harder to define—clarity, depth, or trust. These aren’t things you can quickly build or scale and neither. Also, these aren't metrics that you can easily see the trend of on a dashboard. This is why being good at your function isn’t enough anymore. A marketer can’t just market. A product manager can’t just build. A salesperson can’t just sell.

Everyone is being pulled closer to the same question: What are we really solving, and why does it matter?

There’s also a quiet pressure to keep up. To understand what’s changing. To adapt faster. To not fall behind. Yet, no one has a clear map. We’re all figuring it out as we go.

So what lies ahead for SaaS?

The honest answer is: I don’t know.  Not clearly or confidently, and maybe that’s the most important thing to accept. The future of SaaS isn’t a straight path anymore. It’s uneven and constantly shifting.

While that uncertainty can feel uncomfortable, it also forces something valuable. Better thinking, more intention, and less autopilot. The companies that will stand out won’t just be the ones that move fast. They’ll be the ones that understand deeply and the people who will thrive won’t just follow roles; they’ll ask better questions.

The future of SaaS is hazy. But maybe it always was. The difference is, now, the haze is quite apparent and there are no sunglasses anymore.