Product-market fit hasn’t disappeared — but the definition has quietly changed, and many SaaS founders haven’t adjusted yet.
Over the last year, I’ve watched several SaaS companies with legitimate PMF in 2024 lose 30–40% of their pipeline in under 90 days.
Not because their product got worse.
But because AI collapsed the uniqueness of their features faster than expected.
The core shift most founders are missing
In 2026, PMF is no longer just about solving a problem.
It’s about solving a problem faster, deeper, and in ways AI alone cannot easily replicate.
Today, customers can recreate a surprising amount of SaaS functionality using tools like ChatGPT, Claude, and Cursor — often in days, not months.
That forces a new PMF question:
“What part of our value cannot realistically be rebuilt by a competent team using AI in the next 6 months?”
If that answer is unclear, PMF is fragile.
A practical framework: The 3-layer PMF stack for 2026
From working with SaaS teams adapting successfully, PMF now tends to sit in three layers, not features alone.
This is value tied to:
Proprietary or hard-to-collect data
Deep industry relationships
Regulatory, compliance, or trust infrastructure
AI can generate outputs.
It cannot easily replicate context, ownership, or liability.
AI can build tools.
It struggles to integrate into:
Legacy systems
Internal politics
Change management workflows
The harder your product is to replace inside a real organization, the stronger your PMF becomes.
AI offers capabilities.
Strong SaaS companies offer outcomes.
For example:
“AI can help you build a dashboard”
vs.
“We guarantee a 20–25% cost reduction in 90 days or you don’t pay”
That shift dramatically changes pricing power and retention.
A simple PMF stress test for founders
Ask yourself:
If a customer’s internal team spent two weeks with modern AI tools, what percentage of our value could they realistically rebuild?
If the answer is above ~40%, your PMF is exposed.
Several founders I work with have successfully pivoted not by abandoning AI — but by reframing their value around proprietary data, integrations, and guaranteed outcomes.
Same AI tools.
Very different PMF.
Much stronger pricing power.
Final thought
PMF isn’t dead.
But the 2024 version of PMF — built primarily on feature differentiation — is no longer durable.
The SaaS companies that will win in 2026 are not the ones with the best AI features.
They’re the ones building AI-resistant value.
You're capturing a feeling, I dare say even an acute fear, in many SaaS and generally software companies at this moment. I'm sure there is a market for hands-on, in-depth advice on how to steer clear of this looming cliff edge that we're rushing towards...