SaaS is looking different these days, largely thanks to AI. And that’s a good thing. It has become a set of tools that are less traditional products and more intelligent systems that learn, predict and automate. The pace of change is rampant, with promises of progress made, met and then surpassed seemingly by the day. But in amongst this, the concept of “innovation” has become a catch-all term, all too often defined by how quickly companies can bolt AI onto something. Where there is less focus is around how to approach this in a meaningful way to improve outcomes for users.
In a tech landscape where innovation has become a rinse and repeat exercise of speedy adoption, true innovation means something else altogether. To be an innovative business today, you need to approach AI with the intention of helping companies and people solve specific challenges – and, in particular, ensure it is user-first in the implementation, giving them the ability to work confidently and compliantly, while also being more efficient.
Today, many conversations about AI focus on concerns around the potential risks of using AI, and therefore the need to control it, and for good reason. Unmanaged AI can cause errors and inaccuracies, resulting in brand and compliance issues, as well as loss of revenue. Having the ability to retain this control ensures that speed can be achieved with peace of mind and trust.
In this user-first world, the notion of control and what this looks like matters even more to ensure that employees are empowered to work efficiently. Very often, companies will respond to new technology by centralizing authority. This often involves locking critical processes behind additional, often cumbersome, layers of approval for the sake of security. It might be logical on paper, but if approached incorrectly, can risk the very productivity and agility that enables innovation.
In the case of document generation, a critical but sometimes overlooked branch of business, every proposal, contract or deck of slides represents a crucial intersection – the one between brand, compliance and revenue. And herein lies the potential risk of blanket, rigid controls. If control is concentrated too narrowly, it can become a bottleneck, and employees can end up spending an extraordinary amount of time finding the “right” document or template as opposed to doing their work.
Organizations need to give users the ability to get their work done – creating business documents in this instance – with AI, but also feel comfortable, confident and trust in how the AI is being used, and the outputs it’s generating. What this comes down to is knowing how to apply control in a way that it is seamlessly operating almost unnoticed in the background, bringing reassurance to the company while also allowing the user to complete tasks uninterrupted.
By embedding trusted company knowledge directly into document workflows – which are paired with agentic AI that guides creation dynamically – employees can quickly generate business content that is accurate and compliant. Through this lens, AI allows every employee to operate with the same confidence and commitment to quality that once depended on manual oversight, except much faster, while the organization has peace of mind.
This isn’t about reducing the importance of control or relaxing standards; control is more critical than ever, but it’s about applying control in the right way to ensure the user is empowered in their everyday work.
Much like innovation, “disruption” is a term that’s thrown around, but in the case of document generation, true disruption is what’s needed. Traditional document workflows rely on tedious manual searches, static templates and disconnected tools. Systems like this don’t just slow everyone down; they keep businesses from realizing the full value of their collective knowledge.
We live in a time where generative and agentic AI can be quite seamlessly integrated into company systems and stacks. The opportunity to replace friction with fluidity is enormous. Imagine a world where workers no longer have to comb through endless shared drives or wait on approval loops just to get their hands on something as simple, and key to their work, as a compliant presentation or branded proposal.
Enabling workers with AI creates this world, and leads to an effortless combination of contextual awareness, corporate data and individual expertise that generates output that ticks every quality, compliance and relevance box. This is not disruption for the sake of it. To disrupt, you need to change something at the fundamental level, to the point where industries can’t ever return to the status quo. What we’re talking about here is getting rid of the invisible barriers that make control tantamount to delay.
The next wave of AI innovation will distinguish between technologies that reinforce bureaucracy and those that enable people to move with both precision and speed, leading to better outcomes and revenue opportunities.
The ecosystem of SaaS is already moving rapidly to this new template for empowered control. Leaders in this transformation are not just focusing on AI capabilities, but designing systems that elevate human capabilities and corporate knowledge.
In document generation, this means acknowledging the fact that speed is great but if that’s all you’ve got, you’ll crash. Accuracy, compliance and trust are just as important now, and they only exist when AI is connected properly to your company’s existing information architecture.
Agentic AI is a huge step in the right direction. Document agents are enabling businesses to scale intelligent document generation safely. They can do this because they’re able to reason
about context, learn from structured knowledge bases and generate content from simple conversations with users. These systems don’t replace anyone; they augment them, embedding brand integrity and governance directly into each output. It means that company knowledge, expertise and best practice can now be applied and leveraged by everyone via AI agents, bringing with it the opportunity to solve challenges that have surrounded bespoke document creation for many years.
This also aligns very well with a more open and resilient SaaS philosophy. When you bet everything on a single LLM, you’re taking a huge risk. Real strength comes from diversifying. Just like your investment portfolio should be diversified, so should your AI stack. Businesses should integrate multiple models and align them with proprietary data.
This may sound like a hassle but in practice, what you’re doing is staying open while remaining grounded in key principles of control, trust and people’s knowledge.
The future belongs to users, and companies need to understand how, when and where to apply control in this new context. The technology providers that empower their customers to shepherd AI, context and trusted company knowledge towards the most important business outcomes are going to take the wins. It’s in taking this approach that employees can confidently leverage AI to complete more business tasks, faster, opening up more revenue opportunities.


