“Microsoft just laid out a new way to keep enterprise software growing in an AI-heavy workplace: charge AI agents for software seats the same way companies pay for human employees.
The old SaaS model was easy, a company buys 1 license for 1 worker, so revenue rises when headcount rises.
AI agents threaten that model because 1 person might supervise 10 or 50 agents, which makes investors ask why a company would still need to pay for many separate licenses.
So Microsoft executive Rajesh Jha’s answer is that an agent may become its own software user, with its own identity, login, email, permissions, and access to tools, which turns each agent into a possible paid seat.
It shifts the pricing logic from “how many humans work here” to “how many active digital workers operate inside the company.”
Basically his logic is, once an agent can read messages, call apps, update records, and take actions on its own, software systems may need to track it as a distinct actor for security, auditing, and workflow control.
That gives Microsoft, Salesforce, and Workday a path to defend seat-based pricing even if AI reduces human hiring.”
https://x.com/rohanpaul_ai/status/2044155404100481438?s=20