Alex Rampell
General Partner at Andreessen Horowitz (a16z)
General Partner at Andreessen Horowitz (a16z). Coined the three-bucket framework for SaaS disruption by AI: seats tied to outcomes, seats as pricing trick, and middle ground.
About Alex Rampell
Alex Rampell is a General Partner at Andreessen Horowitz (a16z), where he focuses on fintech and enterprise software investments. He is a serial entrepreneur who founded multiple companies including TrialPay (acquired by Visa) and Point (mortgage tech).
In the AI era, Rampell has become a prominent voice on how AI disrupts SaaS business models. His three-bucket framework for understanding which SaaS companies are at risk — distinguishing between seats tied to outcomes, seats as a pricing mechanism, and hybrid models — has become one of the clearest analytical tools for evaluating AI’s impact on enterprise software.
Career Highlights
- Andreessen Horowitz (a16z): General Partner, enterprise and fintech investments
- TrialPay: Founded, acquired by Visa
- Point: Co-founded, mortgage technology
- Serial entrepreneur: Founded multiple companies before joining a16z
Notable Positions
On Three Types of SaaS
Rampell’s framework for understanding AI disruption of software:
“Category one is you have seats, the seats are being used to produce some element of work, but now you don’t need the seats anymore. Zendesk would be patient one — that revenue stream is 100% going to zero. On the other hand, it could triple or quadruple because they might just move to outcome-based pricing.”
On Why Vibe Coding Won’t Replace Enterprise Software
Citing David Ricardo’s 1817 theory of comparative advantage:
“You could also grow your own food. You could weld your own aluminum. But even those are bad examples because it’s very simple to grow food or weld aluminum. All the edge cases that lie beneath — what happens in Indiana if the person leaves and they’re on maternity leave?”
On Pricing Fairness
Rampell draws on Dan Ariely’s “Predictably Irrational” to explain why per-seat pricing persists: humans pay for perceived fairness, not efficiency. The locksmith who solves your problem in 30 seconds gets a bad review; the one who takes 9 hours gets a tip.
Key Quotes
- “Nobody’s going to get rid of QuickBooks.” (on systems of record being safe from AI disruption, 2026)
- “AI credits are casino chips — you don’t know if your credits are the same as theirs.” (on consumption-based pricing, 2026)
Related Reading
- Mike Cannon-Brookes - Co-panelist on SaaS disruption discussion
- SaaS-to-AI Transformation - The trend Rampell’s framework helps analyze
Video Mentions
SaaS apocalypse and AI pricing models
Presented three-bucket framework for SaaS disruption: seats tied to outcomes (Zendesk, at risk), seats as pricing trick (Workday, safe), and middle ground (Adobe). Argued vibe coding won't replace enterprise software citing David Ricardo's comparative advantage.