Alex Finn reposted

I think a majority of 100+ person software companies die in the next 2 years Every big idea that requires 100s of people to develop will just be vibe coded by smaller teams in minutes. Even if they can only vibe code 70% of the product that’ll be enough to cancel all the contracts with big SaaS companies I think you see the death of 100+ person SaaS companies and an absolute explosion of 1-5 person SaaS companies building extremely useful AI forward tools for very small slivers of the market. Tools built for a niche of a niche of a niche. AI CRM tools for Korean grocery stores. AI payroll tool for lumber warehouses. Use cases big generalist companies like Salesforce or Cursor would never go after. These companies will make maybe $15 million a year max. 0% chance of ever going public or becoming a household name. But if you’re a 5 person company with a $200 subscription to Codex, that’s an incredible amount of money. There hasn’t been 1 software release from the last 6 months where I couldn’t rebuild it myself in minutes. Now with my OpenClaw autonomously reading the internet, looking for successful tools and just building them without my permission, I wake up to SaaS I can use and sell every morning. It’s completely abundant. What this means for you: • Learn vibe coding (I’d recommend OpenClaw, Codex, Claude Code) • Think about where you areas of expertise are • If you have no areas of expertise, have your OpenClaw teach you • Build a niche app for that area of expertise • Have your OpenClaw go out and find potential customers • DM/email them • Change your life I’m 100% confident this is the future. Up to you if you’ll do anything about it

alexfinn's profile

Alex Finn @alexfinn

Short every SaaS company on planet earth Today Cursor announced a REALLY sick feature that probably cost them millions of dollars to make Their AI agent records demo videos of itself after it builds things I gave the announcement to my OpenClaw. It built it out in 5 minutes. I pasted in the announcement to Henry. He said on it chief. 5 minutes later he not only built out the entire feature, but recorded a demo video of it too It's now implemented into our entire workflow. Now every time I ask my OpenClaw to build something, a demo video will be attached to every PR At this point how does any SaaS survive? You can take quite literally any feature they build, give it to your personal assistant, and it's built out in 5 minutes What moat is left? When I have superintelligence running locally on my mac studio, and it's able to build out any piece of software I can imagine in minutes, literally what value is left in any software company? This is the most exciting, frightening, awe inspiring time to ever be alive

Sort: