AI Isn't a Software Upgrade, and the Market Knows It
Software stocks recently lost nearly $1 trillion in value, even as many of the largest software companies reported strong quarters.
Something structural is changing. Foundation model companies are now shipping products that overlap directly with established enterprise software categories. Investors are beginning to recognize what AI practitioners have been seeing for some time. AI is not a software upgrade. It's a different paradigm, and it demands a different operating mindset.
From a field perspective, we see this already rippling into how organizations buy, build, and deploy AI. The market may be waking up to it now. Practitioners should internalize it just as fast.
Here's the shift we see happening
For decades, deploying technology followed a similar pattern: define the process, configure the software, then train the organization to operate within it. The process was built around the tool. That model worked because software was designed to organize and enforce known, repeatable workflows.
AI breaks that assumption
When you force AI into predefined steps and linear workflows, you suppress the very capabilities that make it valuable. AI is built to reason through ambiguity, make judgment calls, and operate under shifting constraints. Extracting value requires a different design logic, one that lets AI decide the next action dynamically based on the situation, rather than being locked into a fixed, predefined sequence.
At Bruviti, this is the mindset we operate from. We build AI around the workflow itself, not as a bolt-on to existing tools, but as a system built to handle the messy reality of daily operations. In fields where success depends on human judgment and complex dot connecting, AI that lives inside the process itself is the key to transformative results. The paradigm is shifting.