The pace of innovation in AI and agent driven capabilities has created an entirely new operating reality for software companies. Features are shipped faster than organizations can operationalize them, customer expectations evolve overnight, and the pressure to monetize emerging capabilities grows stronger each quarter.
Himanshu Mishra’s presentation at the Usage Economy Summit 2025 addressed this accelerating landscape with a clear message. Monetization models will only succeed when the execution layer has a seat at the table from day one.
For years, product and engineering teams controlled the innovation pipeline. They discovered customer needs, built features, and then handed the work to go-to-market teams to take to market. That flow already strained operations. The arrival of rapid AI feature development has amplified the dysfunction.
Capabilities are now built and released at speeds that overwhelm internal systems. Billing teams, finance teams, RevOps, success, and support often learn about new capabilities only when customers begin to consume them. The result is margin risk, revenue recognition issues, billing complexity, and customer confusion.
Himanshu cautioned that this is no longer sustainable. Uncontrolled innovation introduces real financial impact. AI workloads generate variable cloud costs. New features require metering. Revenue must be recognized differently. Promises made in the market must match what back end systems can support.
A major theme of the presentation was the importance of front loading value definition. Before teams build or price a capability, they must answer three critical questions.
This value-first lens shifts the conversation away from inside out engineering excitement and toward a disciplined assessment of customer benefit and feasibility.
Value and cost only work when the execution layer connects them. Billing systems, revenue platforms, product and usage data, sales insights, and customer support environments must align early in the monetization cycle. Without this alignment, pricing models fall apart in the real world.
Himanshu emphasized a simple truth. If you cannot meter it, bill it, recognize it, support it, and scale it, then it is not a monetization model. It is just an idea. The back office is no longer a cost center. It is now a strategic control point for customer value delivery and company margin protection.
As a remedy for the chaotic AI innovation cycle, Himanshu introduced the Innovation Roundtable. This is not a theoretical model. It is a practical, eight part framework designed to bring the entire organization together early.
Participants include:
This group becomes the guardian of margin and the voice of customer reality. Its role is to ensure that innovation does not happen in isolation and that monetization decisions do not become disconnected from what customers can understand, what sales can sell, and what systems can support.
Himanshu’s second framework, the Innovation Sandbox, provides an actionable path for experimentation.
This approach removes guesswork and replaces it with evidence. It also helps teams avoid costly missteps, such as introducing usage or AI charges that destroy margin or confuse customers.
While many companies aspire to pure usage models, Himanshu explained that most will remain hybrid for the foreseeable future. Seats will shift from a headcount model to an access model. AI driven features will create secondary usage streams. Very few companies will operate with both primary and secondary usage models because revenue dilution becomes a risk if too much value shifts to consumption based billing.
The right path is simple: start with a small usage component for AI capabilities and scale it only when the model is proven.
Himanshu closed with a direct challenge to the audience. Enablement teams are no longer observers. They are central to the revenue engine. Billing, finance, RevOps, customer success, and support now share equal responsibility with product and sales in shaping monetization strategy.
He left attendees with three mandates.
In an era where AI accelerates both opportunity and complexity, organizations that succeed will be those where innovation and monetization are tied directly to the capabilities of the execution layer. Himanshu’s message is clear. The companies that win are the ones that elevate enablement, safeguard margins, quantify value, and bring every monetization decision through a disciplined, cross functional operating model.
This is the new foundation of profitable growth in the Usage Economy.
Pricing isn’t just a number, it’s a strategic capability built for scale. In a world where volatility is the norm, modern companies are designing flexible pricing models that support growth, whether through new products or M&A.
This session from The Usage Economy Summit 2025 with Himanshu Mishra explores how to align pricing with product design, go-to-market strategy, and roadmap planning to build frameworks that win deals and evolve with the business. Learn how to experiment, adapt, and make pricing a core part of your growth engine.