The vendor sales pitch most midmarket buyers are hearing right now is the wrong pitch.
Almost every agentic AI conversation in the market today is framed around process improvement - automate the workflow, accelerate the handoffs, reduce the cycle time. It is a coherent story. It is also misreading the buyer. Techaisle's research shows midmarket firms are not asking vendors to make their processes faster, smoother, or more integrated. They are asking for the process to disappear entirely.
That distinction is not semantic. It governs which vendors win the next budget cycle and which ones get politely thanked and shown the door.

The data the market keeps misreading
The clearest evidence of the gap shows up in Techaisle's GenAI adoption study of SMBs. 76% report that GenAI has accelerated employee task completion. Only 15% report improved business processes.
The standard reading of that data - and I see it in vendor decks every week - is that GenAI is "still maturing" and that process improvement will catch up as adoption deepens. That reading is wrong. The gap between 76 and 15 is not a maturity lag. It is a category error. GenAI made individual employees faster at executing the same processes they had before. That was never what midmarket buyers actually wanted. They wanted fewer processes to execute. The technology delivered on the wrong promise, and the data is the receipt.
I have started calling the space between those two numbers the process translation gap. It is the difference between making a worker faster at sending an invoice-approval email and questioning whether the approval email needs to exist in the first place. Almost no vendor in the market is positioned to bridge it. Almost every midmarket buyer is now looking for one who can.
Why "rearchitecture" is also the wrong word



