Is product-led growth (PLG) dying in 2027, or evolving into hybrid GTM?
Published Jun 14, 2026 · Updated Jun 14, 2026
Direct Answer
Product-led growth is not dying in 2027 — it is evolving into a hybrid model, and the data is clear: hybrid PLG-plus-sales companies hit their Net Revenue Retention targets more often than pure-PLG ones, and AI agents are becoming the new "user" driving signups. Wes Bush, who coined the term, puts it plainly: PLG "is not dead, and won't be — but it's evolving quickly," into an agentic PLG 2.0 and a headless PLG 3.0.
The hybrid shift is now the standard: 67% of hybrid PLG-plus-sales-led companies hit their Net Revenue Retention targets versus 58% of pure-PLG, and hybrid is the default for almost every B2B SaaS above $10M ARR. Adoption is wide — 58% of B2B SaaS run a PLG motion and 91% of those plan to increase investment.
The newest force is the AI agent as buyer: at Netlify, about 80% of new signups are now AI agents, not humans, pushing free-to-paid conversion past what traditional PLG reached. Pricing followed: 43% of SaaS now use hybrid models blending seats, usage, and outcomes — projected to reach 61% by end of 2026 — and those companies report 38% higher revenue growth than pure-subscription peers.
For operators, the PLG question is a clean lesson in why the answer is rarely "either/or" — the durable model blends product-led acquisition with sales-led depth, and now designs for the agent as a user.
1. PLG Is Not Dead — It's Evolving
The man who coined it says so
The clearest signal comes from Wes Bush, who coined "product-led growth." His verdict: PLG "is not dead, and won't be — but it's evolving quickly." The narrative of PLG's death confuses a maturing model with a failing one. The motion is changing shape, not disappearing.
PLG 2.0 and 3.0
Bush frames the evolution in versions: PLG 2.0 is agentic — AI woven into the product experience — and PLG 3.0 is headless, where adoption happens without a traditional human-driven interface. The model is moving up a curve, not off a cliff.
2. Hybrid Is the New Standard
The data favors hybrid
The strongest evidence for evolution is performance. 67% of hybrid PLG-plus-sales-led companies hit their Net Revenue Retention targets, versus 58% of pure-PLG companies. Combining PLG's acquisition efficiency with sales-led revenue depth simply retains and expands revenue better than either alone.
The default above $10M ARR
The market has already moved: hybrid is the default for almost every B2B SaaS above $10M ARR. PLG is widely run — 58% of B2B SaaS have a PLG motion and 91% of those plan to increase investment — but at scale it is almost always paired with a sales motion rather than run pure.
The debate is settled in practice: most companies run both.
3. The AI Agent as the New User
Agents are signing up
The newest force reshaping PLG is the AI agent as buyer. At Netlify, about 80% of new signups are now AI agents, not humans — software evaluating and adopting software. This is the leading edge of Bush's headless PLG 3.0, where the "user" doing the self-serve motion is an agent.
Conversion traditional PLG can't match
Agent-led growth is pushing free-to-paid conversion rates that traditional PLG cannot match, because an agent can evaluate, integrate, and adopt a product faster than a human trialing it manually. For operators, this means the onboarding and conversion experience now has to work for a non-human user — a profound change in who PLG is designed for.
4. Pricing Followed the Model
Hybrid pricing rises
As the motion went hybrid, so did pricing. 43% of SaaS companies now use hybrid models blending seats, usage, and outcome-based components, with adoption projected to reach 61% by end of 2026. The flat per-seat subscription is giving way to a blend that captures value from both human seats and consumption.
Hybrid pricing pays
The results justify it: companies using hybrid pricing report 38% higher revenue growth than pure-subscription peers. Matching the pricing model to a hybrid motion — seats for predictability, usage and outcomes for value capture — outperforms forcing everything into one model. Pricing evolved alongside the go-to-market.
5. The RevOps and GTM Lessons
The answer is rarely either/or
The clearest lesson is that PLG versus sales-led is a false choice. The data shows hybrid wins — better Net Revenue Retention, the default above $10M ARR. Operators should stop framing GTM as a binary and instead design the blend: product-led to acquire efficiently, sales-led to expand and retain.
The durable model uses both motions for what each does best.
Design for the agent as a user
With 80% of signups at Netlify being agents, operators should treat the AI agent as a first-class user of the self-serve motion. That means onboarding, documentation, and conversion paths that an agent can navigate — APIs, clear programmatic access, machine-readable steps — because the next wave of PLG adoption increasingly runs through software, not humans.
Match pricing to the motion
Hybrid motions perform best with hybrid pricing, and the 38% growth gap shows the cost of mismatch. Operators should align the pricing model to the go-to-market: seats where buyers want predictability, usage and outcomes where value scales with use. A modern motion paired with a flat legacy price leaves growth on the table.
FAQ
Is product-led growth dying in 2027? No. Wes Bush, who coined the term, says PLG "is not dead, and won't be — but it's evolving quickly," into an agentic PLG 2.0 and a headless PLG 3.0. The model is maturing into a hybrid, not disappearing.
Why is hybrid GTM the new standard? Because it performs better. 67% of hybrid PLG-plus-sales-led companies hit their Net Revenue Retention targets versus 58% of pure-PLG, and hybrid is the default for almost every B2B SaaS above $10M ARR, combining PLG acquisition with sales-led depth.
How are AI agents changing PLG? Agents are becoming the new user. At Netlify, about 80% of new signups are AI agents, not humans, driving free-to-paid conversion past what traditional PLG reached — the leading edge of headless PLG 3.0.
How is SaaS pricing changing alongside PLG? Toward hybrid models. 43% of SaaS now blend seats, usage, and outcomes (projected 61% by end of 2026), and companies using hybrid pricing report 38% higher revenue growth than pure-subscription peers.
What can operators learn from the PLG debate? That PLG versus sales-led is a false choice — hybrid wins; that operators should design for the agent as a user; and that they should match pricing to the motion to avoid leaving growth on the table.
Bottom Line
Product-led growth is not dying in 2027 — it is evolving into a hybrid model, as its own creator Wes Bush insists. Hybrid PLG-plus-sales companies hit Net Revenue Retention targets more often (67% vs 58%), hybrid is the default above $10M ARR, and AI agents now drive 80% of signups at Netlify.
Pricing followed, with hybrid models delivering 38% higher growth. For operators, the lessons are exact: the answer is rarely either/or, design for the agent as a user, and match pricing to the motion.
Sources
- SaaS Mag — PLG in 2026: product-led growth evolves into full-stack GTM
- Userpilot — Product-led growth strategy in 2026: transition into the agentic AI era
- Salesmotion — SaaS go-to-market strategy: PLG, sales-led, or hybrid
- Jimo — Product-led growth vs sales-led growth: a complete guide in 2026
- GreyRadius — PLG vs SLG: which GTM strategy will dominate in 2026
- Userpilot — Product-led vs sales-led: choosing the right GTM
*PLG review — product-led growth reviews, rating, PLG review 2027, and a review of the hybrid GTM shift, agent-led signups, and hybrid pricing for RevOps operators.*