Start with the graph, not the pitch. We trained an InfraNodus knowledge graph on a research corpus built around a single counterfactual: if skilled tradespeople are the cohort about to capture the next decade of wealth creation, is ServiceTitan positioned to serve them? The graph answered before we wrote a word of editorial. The owner node carries a betweenness centrality of 0.350 and degree 87 — the single most connective concept in the discourse. The servicetitan node sits at betweenness 0.118 and degree 56. Third in degree. Fifth in betweenness. Roughly one-third as structurally central as the tradesperson-owner the platform claims to serve.
That is not an editorial interpretation. That is how the market is actually talking about this industry. Nine clusters, modularity 0.47 — the discourse is structurally partitioned, and the partition does not flatter the incumbent. Clusters one and two (Trade Dynamics and AI Dispatch) account for 49% of betweenness combined. ServiceTitan’s cluster — Service Targeting — accounts for 11%. The thesis discourse has an owner-AI-PE triangle at its center, and ServiceTitan is a supporting character.
When the graph centers the owner, it tells you whose wealth story this is. ServiceTitan wrote a platform story about a wage economy. The data says the wealth event is elsewhere.ShurIQ Analysis · Graph Layer
The thesis is formal. Wealth in the trades has always been an ownership story. AI now makes solo and small-shop ownership economically viable for the first time, because every back-office dollar AI saves is a dollar that does not leave the shop. Private equity was already paying Sila Services 17× EBITDA in November 2024 before the AI margin unlock. Layer AI on top and the ownership spread widens further. The millionaire plumber is not a wage number. She is an owner with a customer list, a license, a truck, and an exit.
Any operating system built for the trades has to make a choice about protagonist. ServiceTitan made the choice a decade ago: the platform. That choice shows up everywhere — in the per-tech-per-month pricing, in the 6-to-12 month implementation, in the explicit “not optimized for 3 or fewer technicians” segmentation policy. Every one of those choices is defensible inside a SaaS logic. None of them are defensible inside the trades-millionaire logic. That mismatch is the brief.
We read the graph as evidence, not decoration. The remainder of this report is a walk through what it is saying and what ServiceTitan could do about it.