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Traditional Software is Changing. AI Agents Are What’s Next.

Mar 31, 2026

By Vin Vomero, CEO FoxyAI

There’s a quiet shift happening in enterprise technology, and it’s bigger than most people are letting on. The software we’ve spent decades building — the dashboards, the portals, the workflow tools — is starting to look a lot less essential and not the only game in town. Not because it failed. But because something fundamentally more capable has started to take its place. 

AI agents don’t just surface information. They act on it. They reason across data sources, execute multi-step decisions, and complete tasks end-to-end without waiting on a human to click the next button. That’s not an upgrade to traditional software. That’s a different paradigm entirely.

For use-cases and sectors within the Real Estate industry, property preservation, customer servicing and asset management, this matters enormously. The legacy model — a person logs into a platform, reviews data, exports a report, and makes a call is being compressed. Agents handle the review, generate the report, flag the outliers, and in some cases, make the recommendation before a human has even opened their inbox. The “software as tool” era is giving way to the “agent as teammate” era.

This doesn’t mean every SaaS product is headed for the scrapheap. Platforms that serve as intelligence layers — ingesting data, running models, enabling agents to reason and act — will be more valuable than ever. But the static, form-based, button-clicking software of the last two decades? Its role and applicability is shrinking fast.

At FoxyAI, we’ve been building toward this moment longer than the hype cycle has been talking about it. Our agentic solutions don’t just analyze property images — they orchestrate full workflows: occupancy checks, condition scoring, UAD form completion, repair estimates, quality control reviews. Agents that work across text, images, documents, and market data to complete jobs that used to require a team and a stack of software licenses.

The question for real estate professionals isn’t whether AI agents will change how work gets done. It’s whether the tools you rely on today are built to work with them — or will simply get worked around.

Software isn’t dead. But its job description just changed dramatically.