Anyone can build and launch a SaaS in a weekend.
That sounds like a good thing, but it isn't always. Here’s how the software landscape looks now (my observations only):
There appear to be more and more tools that look just polished enough to charge for. However, like 90% of these tools, they fall apart the moment you start actively using them. Then, it becomes obvious that the flows are unnatural and broken, some of the features do not work, and asking for a refund or at least support turns into a side quest.
We are in a timeline full of founders who shipped before they finished building the baseline of their product (I’m not talking about MVP, that’s an entirely different thing).
So, yes, I don’t think that the fact that almost anyone can build a SaaS now is a problem. But I do think that the problem is that launching got easy before the quality bar did.
Users are getting burned, and burned users are harder to sell to. And the whole market now pays for that.