Ramsey Theory Group CEO Dan Herbatschek Urges Enterprises to Prepare for Post-SaaS Era as AI Agents Reshape Software Delivery and Licensing Models
From seat-based licenses to outcome-driven agents, Herbatschek outlines what is next for the intelligent enterprise in the manufacturing, retail automotive and skilled-trades industries
NEW YORK, Oct. 30, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Ramsey Theory Group, a leading provider of applied artificial intelligence solutions for operational transformation, today announced new guidance for business and technology leaders considering the rapidly emerging “post-SaaS era,” in which autonomous AI agents—not humans—become the primary consumers and operators of enterprise software. This shift promises unprecedented efficiency and business performance, but also upends decades-old assumptions around software evaluation, pricing, implementation, and governance.
In a statement released today, CEO Dan Herbatschek emphasized that organizations must quickly adapt their digital strategies, procurement practices, and data architecture to remain competitive.
“For the first time since the rise of SaaS, the end user is no longer a person,” said Dan Herbatschek, CEO of Ramsey Theory Group. “Software agents are becoming the system-to-system operators—initiating workflows, negotiating resources, and executing actions faster than any human ever could. This new model will fundamentally change how software is bought, priced, governed, and valued.”
A Post-SaaS Model Driven by AI Agents
The post-SaaS era is defined by the shift from human-centric application interfaces to agent-to-agent interaction, in which AI systems communicate directly with applications and infrastructure to deliver outcomes. Rather than logging in to complete tasks, humans will increasingly delegate processes to AI agents that operate autonomously within defined guardrails.
Where organizations once measured adoption by the number of users or seats, Herbatschek notes that the new model will measure value by the number of problems solved and outcomes delivered.
“Per-seat licensing is already losing relevance,” Herbatschek said. “AI agents do not need a login. Instead, vendors will move to value-based models—pricing tied to business outcomes, workflow completions, cost savings, or usage volumes. For customers, this is both an enormous opportunity and a new negotiation paradigm.”
Guidance for Customers Navigating the Shift
Ramsey Theory Group advises enterprise leaders in the manufacturing, retail automotive and skilled trades industries to take immediate steps in preparation for new sourcing, governance, and operational models:
1. Evaluate new licensing frameworks
Move beyond seat-based structures and prepare for usage- and outcome-based pricing. Organizations should negotiate predictable pricing tiers and include usage caps to maintain budget control.
2. Prioritize agent-ready platforms
Future-proof architecture requires API-first, secure event-driven systems that support machine-initiated interactions—not just human interfaces.
3. Strengthen governance and oversight
As more automated systems execute tasks independently, enterprises must build agent monitoring, decision logging, and escalation pathways to ensure traceability and compliance.
4. Link value to outcomes
Customers should require vendors to define measurable performance outcomes—such as cycle-time reduction, throughput increases, or loss-prevention—and tie fees to delivered value.
5. Build new operational roles
Organizations will need new roles such as “Agent Operations” and “AI Workflow Stewardship” to maintain and improve autonomous systems.
“This is not merely a procurement change—it is an organizational transformation,” Herbatschek added. “The companies that thrive will be those that learn to govern AI agents with the same rigor they once applied to human workers.”
Industry Implications
Herbatschek anticipates especially rapid adoption in industries with complex, repetitive workflows—such as automotive retail, manufacturing, and supply chain—where AI agents can orchestrate processes across multiple systems, reducing labor burden while improving speed and continuity.
“If the last decade was about digitizing workflows, the next decade is about delegating them,” he said. “The winners will be those who build an operating model where humans define strategy and constraints—while AI agents execute.”
Ramsey Theory Group’s Role
Ramsey Theory Group is actively helping clients navigate the transition to agent-based operations, supporting companies with:
- AI workforce and workflow design
- Governance and policy frameworks
- Vendor evaluation and next-generation sourcing
- Operational readiness assessment
- Implementation and managed AI operations
“Our mission is to ensure enterprises don’t merely adopt AI—but operationalize it safely, ethically, and profitably,” Herbatschek said.
Visit https://www.ramseytheory.com/ to learn more.
About Ramsey Theory Group
Ramsey Theory Group is a technology firm specializing in software development, artificial intelligence, IT & cybersecurity, digital marketing, and product development for the manufacturing, automotive, and skilled-trade industries. Founded by Dan Herbatschek, the company leverages applied mathematics, engineering and strategic consulting to help enterprises optimize workflows, secure their operations, and build resilient technology platforms. With its deep expertise across cloud security, hybrid infrastructure, and enterprise risk management, RTG is well positioned to guide organizations seeking to withstand the next major cloud event.
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