I like that there's a new term for this. PaSH, sure, why not!<p>That said, I can't help but think the following:<p>1) Before software, there were already products and services.<p>2) Software came along, and was used by people providing products and services. In a way, this was already PaSH, kind of, just more indirectly and it wasn't called that as the emphasis was on the products and services provided, and not the software.<p>3) Software began being provided by "application service providers" (ASPs), which sort of evolved into SaaS (software as a service). We even sort of commandeered the term "services" as an abstraction over software/business services as in "web services".<p>4) Now we are talking about "software", plus the old meaning of "service", where the two are fused into one.<p>It's a new word (but not really a new concept) for a somewhat more recent organizational form ("service based organizations").
It took a while for the post to get there, but the point is incredibly spot on. Building out a product is hard and getting to big money is hard, but people and companies pay for service all the time. Turning a service into a product is something I've been thinking a lot about lately and there seems to be an interesting spot forming between consulting and products.<p>The most interesting thing to me is the potential revenue difference between just a product and just a service.<p>For example, take something like Shopify. They are purely a product, they charge $79 and it's totally hands off. If you were doing a custom shopping cart or whatever, you might charge $5,000 or something to build/cusotomize a solution.<p>There is very likely a place where you could run someone's store for them for like $500-1,000 a month without them having to touch anything. You could hire and train someone to run these stores and each person could run say 100 stores. That is 50-100k per month per person running those stores.<p>It would not be super difficult to find that many customers and be able to pay people to service those customers well. The outcome for said customers would likely be better than if they had to manage it themselves, but it would be a lot better than what most build and move on type consultant type arrangements would provide.<p>The same idea applies to a lot of niches, not just e-commerce. I suspect there will be a lot of offerings that pop up in the next few years that do exactly this.
Don't services come naturally in SaaS? Because of its subscriptions model nature, you usually want to make sure your customer are successful and grow with you. I've seen entire groups within SaaS organization dedicated to customer success (on boarding, education, etc). Which part is being billed and which isn't seems to vary however.