For years, enterprise software vendors have fought to keep users inside their applications, but the rise of AI agents and automated workflows is changing that equation. Salesforce has been moving quickly to adapt, with last month’s launch of its new Headless 360 offering.
During its earnings call on Wednesday, Salesforce top executives positioned Headless 360 as both a major AI-era architecture shift and a fresh monetization opportunity, as enterprises increasingly move towards using AI agents, Slack bots and external copilots to access Salesforce data through APIs and MCP servers, rather than its traditional application interfaces, for use in automated workflows .
“We’re going to bring our number one agentic CRM to every surface, meeting customers where they are,” Miguel Milano, Salesforce chief revenue officer, told analysts during the call, explaining the company’s strategy around Headless 360. “And we’re going to work together with our customers and with our partners to find the right ways in a fair way to monetize those new interactions and those new users that are accessing our platform.”
Concerns over unpredictable costs
That evolving pricing strategy, analysts say, reflects customer enterprises’ hesitation around adoption of Headless 360, mainly driven by worries about unpredictable consumption costs.
Dion Hinchcliffe, CIO practice lead at The Futurum Group, said, “CIOs have become highly sensitive to unpredictable consumption pricing after a decade of cloud cost overruns. Enterprises understand the strategic power of headless CRM and agentic workflows, but they are also seeing the possibility of runaway machine-generated activity inside core systems of record.”
The biggest concern, Hinchcliffe pointed out, is not necessarily that of the unit price of an API call, but rather the multiplication effect, wherein autonomous agents, unlike human users, could generate tens of thousands of CRM interactions continuously, across sales, service, marketing, analytics, orchestration, and external AI systems.
“That creates legitimate governance anxiety around future spend, permissions sprawl, auditability, and operational accountability,” he said.
In fact, Robert Kramer, managing partner at KramerERP, sees the rise of automated workflows and agent-driven CRM interactions gradually pushing Salesforce away from the traditional subscription licensing models that were more predictable, and toward more consumption-based pricing when it comes to API and MCP usage.
Thus, according to Hinchcliffe, that metering of API and MCP use for Headless 360 will result in CIOs losing the budget predictability they traditionally associated with CRM platforms, replacing relatively fixed SaaS spending with cloud-style elastic consumption economics, where spend is driven by usage volume.
And predictability, said Rebecca Wettemann, principal analyst at Valoir, is currently one of the biggest hurdles CIO are facing while they try to move any agentic workloads from pilot to production.
Echoing those concerns, Scott Bickley, advisory fellow at Info-Tech Research Group, added that API- and token-driven CRM consumption models could introduce further pricing volatility, because enterprise costs may increasingly fluctuate based on factors such as model routing, context caching, prompt efficiencies, and constantly shifting AI model pricing structures.
Understand costs before adoption
In fact, he sees automated CRM workflows almost certainly increasing enterprise costs.
“Automation based on consumption metrics increases transaction volumes. As the underlying modules of Salesforce are called upon for an integrated experience, each with its own billable layer, costs will explode higher,” Bickley said.
As a result, the analyst advised CIOs to carefully evaluate the business use case and check whether those higher costs can be tied to measurable productivity or revenue gains before broadly adopting automated CRM workflows at scale.
CIOs, Bickley warned further, should be hesitant about committing until the commercial model is formalized, communicated, and well understood.
“Buyers should be asking questions like: What counts as a billable call? Are internal agent calls priced differently from customer/external facing calls? Are there caps or alerts? Can consumption spike unexpectedly?” Bickley said.
Similarly, Adam Mansfield, commercial advisory practice leader in the Salesforce practice at IT negotiation advisory firm UpperEdge, noted that CIOs should ensure that they “negotiate the right pricing and volume discount structures along with the right level of transparency, flexibility, and protections into their contracts for consumption-based pricing.
IT vendors such as Salesforce typically intend and plan for increasing consumption costs, Mansfield said: “They refer to this as the ‘flywheel effect’. Once usage starts to spin, it keeps spinning more and the fees keep coming in and their revenue accelerates with it.”
FinOps-style governance for CRM
According to Hinchcliffe, the shift in pricing models will drive operational changes for CIOs as well.
“They may soon need FinOps-style governance for CRM itself, including token budgets, API quotas, policy-based throttling, workload prioritization, cost anomaly detection, and business-unit chargeback models,” he said.
Those won’t be the only adjustments for CIOs. Amit Jena, AI development manager at IT consultancy firm Kanerika, noted that other operational changes that CIOs need to make would revolve mostly around governance, including agent approval systems, audit trails, and data leakage prevention.
The broader SaaS pricing reckoning
For Ashish Chaturvedi, executive research lead at HFS Research, however, the bigger challenge with metering MCP and API interactions lies in the conflicting incentives it creates for Salesforce itself.
“If you start metering every MCP call and API interaction, you create a perverse incentive: customers will throttle agent usage to control costs, which kills the very adoption flywheel Salesforce needs to justify the strategy,” Chaturvedi said. “Salesforce is caught between wanting to monetize a new surface and not wanting to tax the behavior it’s trying to encourage.”
That tension between enterprise buyers seeking predictable costs and SaaS vendors trying to monetize rising automation volumes as traditional seat-license growth slows is not unique to Salesforce.
According to Bickley, most major enterprise software vendors are now grappling with the same pricing dilemma, as AI agents, embedded assistants, and machine-to-machine workflows increasingly blur the boundaries of traditional SaaS licensing models.
ServiceNow, for example, has begun introducing usage-based pricing for agentic AI workloads, while keeping more deterministic workflows outside metered billing, he said, while Microsoft is experimenting with per-agent pricing models in Copilot Studio, and Workday, though still largely reliant on seat-based licensing, is also facing growing pressure to adapt its pricing strategy for AI-driven usage patterns.
Salesforce, Bickley pointed out, is ahead of many SaaS vendors both in terms of execution and marketing, having already “articulated a coherent enterprise architecture” around agentic AI, APIs, MCP servers and cross-platform workflow integration.
Increased pricing complexity
The caveat, according to Chaturvedi, is the increased complexity around licensing.
“Salesforce customers already navigate one of the most complex licensing structures in enterprise software. Layering consumption-based metering on top of per-seat pricing on top of flex credits on top of ELAs creates a commercial model that requires a spreadsheet to decode and a lawyer to negotiate. Every layer of pricing complexity becomes a reason for a CFO to slow down adoption,” Chaturvedi explained.
Salesforce declined to comment on how API and MCP interactions under Headless 360 are currently being billed. Analysts, however, agreed that most API and MCP calls are currently being billed through a mix of existing API consumption, Agentforce usage constructs, platform entitlements, and negotiated enterprise agreements rather than a single clean “per MCP call” pricing model.
Despite this uncertainty, during the earnings call Milano pointed to customers such as Adecco and Anthropic as examples of rising API- and Headless-driven Salesforce usage. “Anthropic is one of our biggest users of CRM, of Sales Cloud, and obviously Slack. Their usage through Q1 has exploded fivefold because now they’re using Sales Cloud from a Headless perspective,” Milano said.
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Source: News

