Everyone’s asking how to make their SaaS company “AI-native" but lately I’ve seen founders bolt on a chatbot and pretend they’ve transformed. One man's opinionL: That ain't it. If I had to turn your SaaS company into an AI-native company in 90 days? This is the playbook I'd run: 1. Burn your old pitch. You’re not “software for X” anymore. You’re “an intelligent system that eliminates manual process.” Your product should think, decide, and act; not just exist. 2. Pinpoint the workflows AI can own. What are users doing that takes 10 clicks, happens daily and feels like a chore? That’s where AI goes. Summarize it. Predict it. Auto-complete it. Make it disappear. 3. Don’t bolt on a chatbot. Bake it into the core. AI shouldn’t talk about work. It should do the work. Triggers workflows. Files tickets. Updates dashboards. Sends follow-ups. Drafts docs, emails, and next steps. 4. Retrain your team for an AI-native world. This isn’t "take a prompt course." This is a total shift in how you build and sell. PMs need to think like agent designers. Marketers need to build adaptable content engines, not campaigns that launch. CS reps need copilots that handle 80% of tickets before a human lifts a finger. Sales needs a completely new narrative. 5. Build your signature AI workflow. Every AI-native product needs one moment that makes people go: “Wait… it can do that?” Your sales notes auto-sync to CRM, update the forecast, and email summaries. A support convo turns into a bug report, assigned ticket, and change log. Your onboarding configures itself with no human needed. That’s what you demo. That’s what goes viral. 6. Change the story you tell. New site. New deck. New messaging. You’re not a tool. You’re a copilot, a decision engine, a self-improving operator. If you keep selling like it’s 2021, you’ll lose to someone who doesn’t. 7. Move like your future depends on it. 90-day path: Audit workflows + prototype Beta test, iterate fast Public launch + new GTM + show the magic This is a total identity shift. It is not a feature launch. Most companies have yet to do it. They’re coasting, or they're scared. Imagine how scary it will be when their users switch to someone who thinks faster, moves faster, and builds smarter.