Artificial intelligence is creating a subtle but important shift in enterprise technology and services markets. Across both software providers and technology services firms, I am seeing a growing willingness among enterprises to replace incumbent partners. While it is still early, the trend is becoming increasingly visible, and it should concern established providers.

The reason is straightforward: business leaders believe AI will fundamentally change how companies operate, how decisions are made, and what technology architectures will look like in the future. As a result, enterprises are reevaluating a critical question: Do we have the right partners and platforms for the next era?

This question is creating replacement pressure in places where, historically, customers were highly reluctant to switch.

Why Enterprises Prefer to Stay with Incumbents

Most companies would strongly prefer to remain with their existing software vendors and service providers, for obvious reasons. They have invested heavily in those relationships and built processes around those technologies, as well as accumulated years of institutional knowledge. Replacing an enterprise platform or outsourcing partner is expensive, disruptive, and potentially very risky.

Historically, these barriers protected incumbents; technology replacement typically occurred only when a next-generation platform emerged, or when customers concluded that they were strategically committed to the wrong technology. Services replacement followed a similar pattern, often tied to major platform shifts or business transformations.

Today, however, AI is changing the equation. The perceived value of AI is so significant that organizations are becoming more willing to absorb the risks of change if they believe doing so positions them better for the future.

The New Test: Can You Show the Future?

The most effective defense against replacement is not necessarily demonstrating that you have already transformed your business. Instead, customers want to see that you can demonstrate that you know where the market is heading, and how both you and your clients will get there. What customers increasingly want from technology and services providers is a credible vision of the future supported by a detailed roadmap.

For software providers, customers want confidence that three to five years from now, the platform will remain relevant and competitive. For service providers, customers want reassurance that their partner can help them navigate an AI-enabled operating model.

In both cases, the formula is similar:

  • A clear future vision
  • A credible roadmap
  • Evidence that others are successfully moving down that path

When providers can deliver all three, most enterprises will choose the least risky option, which is staying with the incumbent. When they cannot, they become vulnerable.

The Credibility Gap

One of the biggest mistakes I see today is that many providers are talking about AI in ways that lack specificity and credibility. The vision is often filled with broad claims and ambitious statements, but little evidence. Roadmaps are frequently high-level and unsubstantial. There is often no clear explanation of how customers will move from today’s operating model to tomorrow’s vision.

This creates an opening for challengers. A competitor does not necessarily need a better product or service; they simply need a more convincing story about the future and a more believable path to get there.

What builds conviction for enterprise buyers will not be marketing language. Conviction will be built on data. Customers want to understand how their peers are adopting AI; they want to know what competitors are doing and why. They want evidence that the proposed roadmap aligns with observable market behavior.

Interestingly, those examples do not have to involve the provider’s own platform. What matters is demonstrating that organizations are moving in the direction the roadmap predicts. That combination of vision, roadmap, and market evidence becomes a powerful defense against replacement.

AI Creates Two Different Paths Forward

The challenge becomes more complicated because AI is creating two fundamentally different transformation paths.

The first path is extending existing products and services with AI capabilities. This is where most organizations are currently focused. AI improves productivity, closes capability gaps, and enhances existing workflows. These improvements are valuable, but they are generally evolutionary rather than transformational.

The second path is much more disruptive. True reinvention often requires creating a new operational foundation built on ontologies, digital twins, and an AI-driven decision fabric. These architectures allow organizations to observe operations in machine time, model future outcomes, anticipate disruptions, and increasingly automate decisions and actions. This approach creates a fundamentally different technology stack and operating philosophy. It requires different talent, different architectures, and different service models.

Importantly, there is little evidence today that organizations can simply add AI to existing technology estates and naturally evolve into these agentic environments. Instead, what emerges is often a parallel operating model rather than an extension of the current one.

The Incumbent’s Dilemma

This reality creates a difficult challenge for both software and services providers.

Customers increasingly want their existing partners to help them navigate both paths. They want improvements to current systems, but they also want guidance toward entirely new AI-native operating models.

The mistake many incumbents make is trying to position the transformational future as a straightforward extension of today’s technology base. In many cases, it is not. The AI-native future often requires different architectures, different assumptions, and different capabilities than those underpinning existing platforms and service models.

The winners will be the providers that acknowledge this reality and offer both journeys: one roadmap that extends existing capabilities through AI and another that enables more fundamental reinvention.

Watch This Space

AI has elevated replacement risk for every incumbent technology and services provider.

The good news is that enterprises still prefer stability. They still prefer trusted relationships. They still prefer the lowest-risk path. However, these preferences are no longer enough.

To protect their position, incumbents must provide a credible vision of the future, a practical roadmap to get there, and tangible evidence that others are already making the journey. They must also recognize that AI creates two distinct opportunities: improving today’s operating model and building tomorrow’s AI-native enterprise.

The providers that communicate both clearly will strengthen customer loyalty. Those that cannot may discover that, in the age of AI, incumbency is no longer the advantage it once was.

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