Skip to Content
  • Standorte

    Standorte

    North & Latin America
    • Atlanta
    • Austin
    • Bogota
    • Boston
    • Buenos Aires
    • Chicago
    • Dallas
    • Denver
    • Houston
    • Lisbon
    • Los Angeles
    • Mexico City
    • Minneapolis
    • Monterrey
    • Montreal
    • New York
    • Rio de Janeiro
    • San Francisco
    • Santiago
    • São Paulo
    • Seattle
    • Silicon Valley
    • Toronto
    • Washington, DC
    Europe & Africa
    • Amsterdam
    • Athens
    • Berlin
    • Brussels
    • Copenhagen
    • Düsseldorf
    • Frankfurt
    • Helsinki
    • Istanbul
    • Johannesburg
    • Kyiv
    • Lisbon
    • London
    • Madrid
    • Milan
    • München
    • Oslo
    • Paris
    • Rome
    • Stockholm
    • Warsaw
    • Wien
    • Zürich
    Middle East
    • Doha
    • Dubai
    • Riyadh
    Asia & Australia
    • Bangkok
    • Beijing
    • Bengaluru
    • Brisbane
    • Ho Chi Minh City
    • Hong Kong
    • Jakarta
    • Kuala Lumpur
    • Manila
    • Melbourne
    • Mumbai
    • New Delhi
    • Perth
    • Seoul
    • Shanghai
    • Singapore
    • Sydney
    • Tokyo
    Alle Standorte Anzeigen
  • Alumni
  • Presse
  • Newsletter
  • Kontakt
  • DACH-Region | Deutsch

    Wählen Sie Ihre Region und Sprache

    Global
    • Global (English)
    North & Latin America
    • Brazil (Português)
    • Argentina (Español)
    • Canada (Français)
    • Chile (Español)
    • Colombia (Español)
    Europe, Middle East, & Africa
    • France (Français)
    • DACH-Region (Deutsch)
    • Italy (Italiano)
    • Spain (Español)
    • Greece (Elliniká)
    Asia & Australia
    • China (中文版)
    • Korea (한국어)
    • Japan (日本語)
  • Saved items (0)
    Saved items (0)

    You have no saved items.

    Inhalte, für die Sie sich interessieren, werden hier gespeichert und können später gelesen oder weitergeleitet werden.

    Explore Bain Insights
  • Branchenkompetenzen
    Hauptmenü

    Branchenkompetenzen

    • Luft- und Raumfahrt, Verteidigung
    • Agrarwirtschaft
    • Chemieindustrie
    • Infrastruktur und Bauwirtschaft
    • Konsumgüter
    • Finanzdienstleistungen
    • Gesundheitswesen
    • Maschinen- und Anlagenbau
    • Medienwirtschaft
    • Metallindustrie
    • Bergbau
    • Öl und Gas
    • Papier- und Verpackungsindustrie
    • Private Equity
      Branchenkompetenzen
      Private Equity
      • Due Diligence
      • Exit Planning
      • Firm Strategy & Operations
      • Portfolio Value Creation
    • Öffentlicher Sektor und Sozialwesen
    • Einzelhandel
    • Technologie
    • Telekommunikation
    • Transportwesen
    • Reise- und Freizeitbranche
    • Versorgung und erneuerbare Energien
  • Managementkompetenzen
    Hauptmenü

    Managementkompetenzen

    • Customer Experience
    • ESG
    • Innovation
    • M&A
    • Operations
    • People & Organization
    • Private Equity
    • Sales & Marketing
    • Strategie
    • KI, Einblicke und Lösungen
    • Technologie
    • Transformation
  • Digital
  • Publikationen
    Hauptmenü

    Publikationen

    • Branchenthemen
    • Managementthemen
    • Bain-Bücher
    Alle Publikationen
    Ausgewählte Themen
    • Resilienz in der globalen Krise
    • M&A Report
    • Private Equity Podcast
    • Midyear Private Equity Report
    • Agile
    • Engineering Report
    • Digital Transformation
    • Elements of Value®
    • Firm of the Future
    • Nachhaltigkeitsstudie
    • Macro Trends
    • Future of Consumption
    • Weltwirtschaftsforum (WEF)
  • Über uns
    Hauptmenü

    Über uns

    • Was wir bieten
    • Unser Ansatz
    • Unser Team
    • Game Changer Award
    • Female Allstar Board
    • Messbare Ergebnisse (EN)
    • Auszeichnungen
    • Globale Partnerschaften
    • The Mission
    Further: Our global responsibility
    • Vielfalt & Chancengleichheit
    • Soziale Verantwortung
    • Sustainability
    Erfahren Sie mehr zu "Further"
  • Karriere
    Hauptmenü

    Karriere

    • Dein Einstieg
      Karriere
      Dein Einstieg
      • Find Your Place
      • Unsere Arbeitsbereiche
      • Unsere Teams
      • Angebote für Studierende
      • Praktika & Programme
      • Recruiting-Events
    • Arbeiten bei Bain
      Karriere
      Arbeiten bei Bain
      • Blog: Inside Bain
      • Karriere Stories
      • Unsere Bainies
      • Office-Standorte
      • Weiterentwicklung
      • Affinity Groups
      • Deine Benefits
    • Impact Stories
    • Deine Bewerbung
      Karriere
      Deine Bewerbung
      • Das erwartet dich
      • Der Interviewprozess
    FIND JOBS
  • Standorte
    Hauptmenü

    Standorte

    • North & Latin America
      Standorte
      North & Latin America
      • Atlanta
      • Austin
      • Bogota
      • Boston
      • Buenos Aires
      • Chicago
      • Dallas
      • Denver
      • Houston
      • Lisbon
      • Los Angeles
      • Mexico City
      • Minneapolis
      • Monterrey
      • Montreal
      • New York
      • Rio de Janeiro
      • San Francisco
      • Santiago
      • São Paulo
      • Seattle
      • Silicon Valley
      • Toronto
      • Washington, DC
    • Europe & Africa
      Standorte
      Europe & Africa
      • Amsterdam
      • Athens
      • Berlin
      • Brussels
      • Copenhagen
      • Düsseldorf
      • Frankfurt
      • Helsinki
      • Istanbul
      • Johannesburg
      • Kyiv
      • Lisbon
      • London
      • Madrid
      • Milan
      • München
      • Oslo
      • Paris
      • Rome
      • Stockholm
      • Warsaw
      • Wien
      • Zürich
    • Middle East
      Standorte
      Middle East
      • Doha
      • Dubai
      • Riyadh
    • Asia & Australia
      Standorte
      Asia & Australia
      • Bangkok
      • Beijing
      • Bengaluru
      • Brisbane
      • Ho Chi Minh City
      • Hong Kong
      • Jakarta
      • Kuala Lumpur
      • Manila
      • Melbourne
      • Mumbai
      • New Delhi
      • Perth
      • Seoul
      • Shanghai
      • Singapore
      • Sydney
      • Tokyo
    Alle Standorte Anzeigen
  • Alumni
  • Presse
  • Newsletter
  • Kontakt
  • DACH-Region | Deutsch
    Hauptmenü

    Wählen Sie Ihre Region und Sprache

    • Global
      Wählen Sie Ihre Region und Sprache
      Global
      • Global (English)
    • North & Latin America
      Wählen Sie Ihre Region und Sprache
      North & Latin America
      • Brazil (Português)
      • Argentina (Español)
      • Canada (Français)
      • Chile (Español)
      • Colombia (Español)
    • Europe, Middle East, & Africa
      Wählen Sie Ihre Region und Sprache
      Europe, Middle East, & Africa
      • France (Français)
      • DACH-Region (Deutsch)
      • Italy (Italiano)
      • Spain (Español)
      • Greece (Elliniká)
    • Asia & Australia
      Wählen Sie Ihre Region und Sprache
      Asia & Australia
      • China (中文版)
      • Korea (한국어)
      • Japan (日本語)
  • Saved items  (0)
    Hauptmenü
    Saved items (0)

    You have no saved items.

    Inhalte, für die Sie sich interessieren, werden hier gespeichert und können später gelesen oder weitergeleitet werden.

    Explore Bain Insights
  • Branchenkompetenzen
    • Branchenkompetenzen

      • Luft- und Raumfahrt, Verteidigung
      • Agrarwirtschaft
      • Chemieindustrie
      • Infrastruktur und Bauwirtschaft
      • Konsumgüter
      • Finanzdienstleistungen
      • Gesundheitswesen
      • Maschinen- und Anlagenbau
      • Medienwirtschaft
      • Metallindustrie
      • Bergbau
      • Öl und Gas
      • Papier- und Verpackungsindustrie
      • Private Equity
      • Öffentlicher Sektor und Sozialwesen
      • Einzelhandel
      • Technologie
      • Telekommunikation
      • Transportwesen
      • Reise- und Freizeitbranche
      • Versorgung und erneuerbare Energien
  • Managementkompetenzen
    • Managementkompetenzen

      • Customer Experience
      • ESG
      • Innovation
      • M&A
      • Operations
      • People & Organization
      • Private Equity
      • Sales & Marketing
      • Strategie
      • KI, Einblicke und Lösungen
      • Technologie
      • Transformation
  • Digital
  • Publikationen
    • Publikationen

      • Branchenthemen
      • Managementthemen
      • Bain-Bücher
      Alle Publikationen
      Ausgewählte Themen
      • Resilienz in der globalen Krise
      • M&A Report
      • Private Equity Podcast
      • Midyear Private Equity Report
      • Agile
      • Engineering Report
      • Digital Transformation
      • Elements of Value®
      • Firm of the Future
      • Nachhaltigkeitsstudie
      • Macro Trends
      • Future of Consumption
      • Weltwirtschaftsforum (WEF)
  • Über uns
    • Über uns

      • Was wir bieten
      • Unser Ansatz
      • Unser Team
      • Game Changer Award
      • Female Allstar Board
      • Messbare Ergebnisse (EN)
      • Auszeichnungen
      • Globale Partnerschaften
      • The Mission
      Further: Our global responsibility
      • Vielfalt & Chancengleichheit
      • Soziale Verantwortung
      • Sustainability
      Erfahren Sie mehr zu "Further"
  • Karriere
    Häufige Suchanfragen
    • Agil
    • Digital
    • Strategie
    Vorherige Suchanfragen
      Zuletzt besuchte Seiten

      Content added to saved items

      Saved items (0)

      Removed from saved items

      Saved items (0)

      Report

      The New Era in Tech Investing Starts Now

      The New Era in Tech Investing Starts Now

      With growth slowing and AI looming, private equity’s hottest sector is going to require a new playbook.

      Von David Lipman, Christopher Perry, und Grant Kieffer

      • Min. Lesezeit
      }

      Report

      The New Era in Tech Investing Starts Now
      en
      Auf einen Blick
      • Software dealmaking limped along in early 2026 as slowed revenue growth and the threat of AI drove a wedge between buyers and sellers.
      • But amid the tumult, patterns are emerging that suggest how general partners and their portfolio companies can navigate through the uncertainty.
      • Managing both the risk and opportunity posed by AI boils down to rethinking due diligence and value-creation playbooks, while retooling metrics to validate success.

      If software investing has delivered anything to private equity investors so far in 2026, it is the disquieting certainty that the world has changed—probably forever.

      Revenue growth that was running around 20% annually is now trending at half that. Net revenue retention (NRR) has dropped about 8 points since 2021 (see Figure 1). Dealmaking is at a crawl. Aging portfolios are suddenly a thing in tech investing. And looming over everything else is the specter of artificial intelligence, which, at best, threatens the once-unassailable SaaS value proposition and, at worst, raises fears that some software use cases are veering toward obsolescence.

      Figure 1
      Software sector growth has moderated significantly, and net revenue retention is in decline
      visualization
      visualization

      Perhaps most ominous is the building evidence that software is losing the structural advantages that for a decade produced the buyout industry’s shiniest returns. The software assets that are transacting in the private markets continue to attract high prices, largely because sponsors have focused their efforts on selling their A-plus companies. Yet deals completed after the Covid-19 pandemic, including more seasoned investments from 2020 to 2022, are, to date, generating returns below pre-Covid averages (see Figure 2). While many of these investments are not yet fully realized, and performance could improve over time, that will be a challenge given the high prices sponsors paid for assets and the sector’s slowing growth.

      Figure 2
      It will be challenging for postpandemic tech buyouts to achieve returns in line with the prior decade, given high prices paid and less-certain growth
      visualization

      Notes: Includes fully realized deals and deals that have realized at least 25% of their returns; includes all deal sizes; all figures in USD

      Source: SPI by StepStone (April 2026)

      What comes next?

      While predictions aren’t worth a lot amid such uncertainty, it’s safe to say that we’re living through the Wild West atmosphere that attends any period of technological disruption. What we know from previous transformations (the dot-com revolution and the shift to cloud computing come to mind) is that winning business models will eventually emerge from the chaos, and the winners will all have something in common: a deep understanding of customers’ needs and a clear vision for how the emerging technologies can solve those real-world problems with real-world economics.

      At the moment, bold proclamations about AI’s future impact trade off almost daily with reports that few companies are seeing measurable returns from their AI investments. Bid-ask spreads for some software categories might narrow somewhat as AI use cases and business models begin to prove out. But valuations in most categories are essentially up for grabs right now. The biggest issue is that the AI disruption is moving faster than the dot-com or cloud transitions. Most companies are still in discovery mode, searching for ways to meaningfully deploy AI to satisfy customer needs (or what they might need soon).

      Yet, against this backdrop, patterns are emerging that suggest a number of practical actions private equity investors can take right now to keep pressing forward. We already know enough about AI’s disruptive power, in fact, to start making no-regrets shifts in every phase of the PE value proposition. Proactive general partners (GPs) are taking steps to:

      • pragmatically reorient due diligence to more reliably underwrite AI risks and opportunities;
      • refocus value-creation playbooks to zero in on how AI technology can transform offerings through a deeper understanding of customer workflows; and
      • demonstrate bankable progress by marshaling data and metrics that can provide the next owner with compelling AI proof points, not just rosy narratives or random prototypes.

      The new due diligence imperative

      In the decade or so since the subscription model took over software, boosting value has been all about maximizing predictable, recurring revenue. Growth came steadily as vendors added seats, charged more for new features, and cross-sold new products. With no physical product to deliver, each new dollar of revenue fell in large part to the bottom line. And once a SaaS company was established with a customer, the relationship deepened into a competitive moat as software became embedded, users developed habits around it, and data accumulated within the platform.

      AI is changing all that. These new technologies don’t just threaten to leapfrog some software solutions, allowing AI-native companies to swim across those moats (think customer service or software development). AI products also have different economics. The massive calculations powering AI add substantial cost to every query, which requires revenue models based not on seats but on actual usage and results. That shrinks margins and, today at least, makes growth projections uncertain.

      The result is that traditional SaaS signals are increasingly misleading in due diligence. Revenue multiples, annual recurring revenue (ARR), and NRR were reliable proxies for value when software moats were more durable and margins were structurally high. But the correlation between growth rate and valuation is flattening, and traditional underwriting isn’t fully capturing the elements that will help predict which assets are equipped to thrive in a landscape reshaped by AI.

      Diligence in this new environment has to start with an assessment of two things: How much can AI impact the user workflows the software supports, and how much risk is there that AI could displace the software altogether within those workflows? Stress testing requires specificity, since product moats, workflow moats, and data moats each come under different degrees of pressure from AI.

      Strong diligence will also capture upside: How AI-ready is the company itself? Is it rapidly deploying AI internally to improve efficiency? Is it gaining traction with AI on the product side, either by adding features or by launching new products that customers value? The key here is evidence: The market is already bifurcating between companies that can demonstrate measurable AI traction and those that are still spinning a narrative without numbers behind it. In diligence, the key question is no longer “Do they have an AI strategy?” but “Can they show me the proof points?”

      The key question is no longer “Do they have an AI strategy?” but “Can they show me the proof points?”

      AI transformation during ownership

      Using AI internally to improve efficiency and transform workflows is rapidly becoming table stakes for any company in your portfolio, software or otherwise. The opportunity to truly inflect performance still involves some experimentation and faith in the technology, but standing still isn’t an option.

      The more complex question is how to reshape the product roadmap to generate AI-based revenue—and how to scale meaningful innovation at speed. That can be a tall order for an incumbent software company used to optimizing for a traditional seat-based platform, especially given all the daily requirements of managing the core business.

      The companies seeing the most success tend to have a light-bulb moment when they recognize that simply helping humans do tasks faster with incremental product enhancements is increasingly missing the point in an AI world. If an agentic system, for instance, can actually manage a workflow end to end, the goal should be enabling a step change in measurable outcomes, not just user efficiency.

      That means turning the traditional product development approach on its head. Instead of focusing solely on how customers use discrete products within workflows, the most innovative companies are looking to connect the dots across the entire process. They are going deep on the customer’s broad objective and how their solution can be rebuilt to achieve that outcome—sometimes freeing up workers for more productive pursuits, sometimes replacing them altogether.

      If an agentic system can actually manage a workflow end to end, the goal should be enabling a step change in measurable outcomes, not just user efficiency.

      For Zendesk, the $2-billion-revenue customer service platform, the tipping point arrived a couple of years ago when it became obvious that most inquiries being handled by customer service reps could be resolved using AI. Adding AI features to the existing platform might speed up human interaction to a limited degree. But once Zendesk asked itself how much of the customer service work could be done autonomously and reliably, the future was clear: It needed to completely rebuild an AI-based platform to sort queries, surface enterprise-wide knowledge, and work across the company to reach resolutions, all at speeds and accuracy never before possible. 

      Assembling the AI capabilities fast enough posed a major challenge for a company that still needed to maintain growth and service a large installed customer base. The answer: a string of targeted acquisitions that would import expertise in everything from AI-powered automation and quality management to enterprise search and analytics.

      Dialing up the clock speed also required rapidly refocusing the workforce so that more than half the company was working on AI, up from less than 10% just 15 months earlier. That involved a nervy program to prune initiatives, collapse overlapping work, kill bets that were no longer strategic, and otherwise make the painful trade-offs needed to free up capacity. The results have been impressive: In roughly 18 months, Zendesk reported $200 million in ARR from AI, with 20,000 AI customers and nearly 800 million AI interactions in 2025. 

      The lesson here is that AI is not a game of incrementalism. Capturing the opportunity starts with zero-basing product assumptions and reimagining what’s possible. The answer won’t always be a complete rebuild. But you need to decide how you can take customer outcomes to a new level by matching AI technology to a deeper understanding of the relevant workflows. And you’ll need to assess what that will require in terms of adding talent and making organizational changes to support rapid execution.

      Proving it

      It’s no surprise that GPs and their portfolio company management teams are expending massive bandwidth to develop new AI features and products. But they’re probably not spending enough energy to develop the means to track progress and measure impact with concrete data. That helps explain the wide gap in value expectations we’re often seeing between buyers and sellers.

      Because the traditional SaaS KPI stack (ARR, NRR, and gross margin) was built for a different value proposition (a world of near-zero marginal cost, seat-driven expansion, and predictable retention), it fails to capture AI impact reliably. ARR, for instance, is a great measure of the predictable revenue derived from subscription seats. But AI is priced on actual usage and outcomes, which can be bursty and unreliable.

      Some companies try to isolate AI’s top-line impact by breaking out a broad category called “AI-associated revenue.” But that doesn’t tell the story any more than the label “cloud-associated revenue” did a dozen years ago. Understanding the true performance of these products requires separately tracking at least three distinct revenue buckets: traditional AI and machine learning (predictive models, risk scores), AI add-ons (copilots, assistant features), and agentic products (workflow automation, autonomous execution). Each has a distinct margin profile, growth trajectory, and competitive dynamics.

      The cost side, too, is very different. AI products have significant variable costs per use that don’t exist for traditional SaaS solutions. A full understanding of what you’re spending requires tracking hosting and infrastructure costs, third-party model costs, and the fully loaded cost of each employee devoted in full or in part to AI-related R&D. 

      The bottom line is that if you don’t change your metrics, you can’t evaluate AI impact. The revenues and costs directly attributable to AI first need to be separated from the core business and then broken down into their constituent parts. Without that, it’s impossible to answer with precision the three essential questions on everyone’s mind: Is AI driving incremental revenue? Is AI changing cost structures? And are AI-related products scaling efficiently?

      Is AI driving incremental revenue? Is AI changing cost structures? And are AI-related products scaling efficiently? 

      Armed with firm answers, portfolio companies can not only design the best product roadmap and allocate resources accordingly, but GPs can start building the kind of evidence-based exit story buyers are demanding. As more and more due diligence processes recalibrate to focus on AI-specific metrics, the only way to get full credit for hard-won traction against plan is to back it up with clear, compelling proof points.

      Twenty twenty-six will likely be remembered as the year AI truly redefined the software industry—the kind of no-turning-back moment that challenges all previous assumptions. Nothing about that is easy. But the chaos won’t last forever. The leaders coming out of this transformation are already hard at work rethinking how to underwrite risk, inflect portfolio company performance, and measure results in a world upended by AI.

      One thing is clear: There’s no time to waste.

      Autoren
      • Headshot of David Lipman
        David Lipman
        Partner, Boston
      • Headshot of Christopher Perry
        Christopher Perry
        Partner, San Francisco
      • Headshot of Grant Kieffer
        Grant Kieffer
        Partner, Boston
      Kontaktieren Sie uns
      Verwandte Branchen
      • Private Equity
      Wie wir Sie unterstützen können
      • Portfolio Value Creation
      • Tech Due Diligence
      First published in April 2026
      Markierungen
      • Portfolio Value Creation
      • Private Equity
      • Tech Due Diligence

      Wie wir unsere Kunden unterstützt haben

      Mergers & Acquisitions Helping a Healthcare Company Unlock Maximum Value

      Kundenbeispiel lesen

      Strategie Market rewards media company's long-term planning

      Kundenbeispiel lesen

      Performance Improvement Finding profit potential in a struggling private equity portfolio company

      Kundenbeispiel lesen

      Möchten Sie mit uns in Kontakt bleiben?

      Wir unterstützen Führungskräfte weltweit, die kritischen Themen in ihrem Unternehmen zu adressieren. Gemeinsam schaffen wir nachhaltige Veränderungen und Ergebnisse.

      Bain Insights. Unsere Perspektive auf die kritischen Themen, mit denen sich international agierende Unternehmen konfrontiert sehen, finden Sie monatlich in Ihrem Postfach.

      *Ich habe die Datenschutzerklärung gelesen und akzeptiere sie.
      Bitte lesen Sie die Datenschutzerklärung und akzeptieren Sie diese.
      Bain & Company
      Contact us Sustainability Accessibility Rechtliche Hinweise Impressum Datenschutz Cookie-Richtlinie Sitemap Log In

      © 1996-2026 Bain & Company, Inc.

      Kontaktieren Sie Bain

      Wie können wir Ihnen helfen?

      • Business inquiry
      • Career information
      • Press relations
      • Partnership request
      • Speaker request
      Alle weltweiten Büros