Buying vs. Building Software:
Why Off-the-Shelf SaaS Failed Your Workflow
- The Trap: Off-the-shelf SaaS is designed for the "average" user. If your workflow is unique, generic software forces you to operate like everyone else.
- The Hidden Cost: The "Excel Glue"—manual work required to bridge disconnected tools—often costs more than the software itself.
- The Strategy: Follow the 80/20 rule. Buy software for commodity tasks (Payroll, CRM), but build custom solutions for the core 20% that drives your competitive advantage.
The classic debate of Buying vs. Building Software used to be simple: if you had money, you built. If you didn't, you bought. Today, that logic is backward.
Companies today are drowning in "affordable" SaaS subscriptions. You pay £50/month for a CRM, £20/month for project management, and £100/month for an ERP. It looks cheap on the P&L statement.
But the real cost isn't the subscription fee. The real cost is that none of these tools actually fit your business.
The "Average" Trap: Why SaaS Disappoints
Here is the dirty secret of the SaaS industry: Profitable software is built for the average user.
Salesforce, Jira, and HubSpot are designed to capture the widest possible market share. To do that, they build features that satisfy the median use case. They are the "Toyota Camry" of software—reliable, functional, and completely incapable of off-road racing.
If your business operates exactly like everyone else's, buy the software. But if your workflow is your competitive advantage—if you do things faster, smarter, or differently than your competitors—using "average" software forces you to regress to the mean.
The Hidden Cost: The "Excel Glue"
When analyzing the Buying vs. Building Software dilemma, most CFOs miss the "Shadow IT" cost.
Because your SaaS tools don't talk to each other perfectly, your team creates "glue" to hold them together. This usually takes the form of massive, fragile Excel sheets where data is manually copied from System A to System B.
- The SaaS Reality: You pay £50,000/year for software, yet your operations manager spends 10 hours a week copy-pasting CSV files because the "native integration" is broken.
When to Build: The 80/20 Rule
We are a software agency, but we will be the first to tell you: Do not build everything.
Do not build your own email server. Do not build your own payroll tax calculator. Those are solved problems.
You should build custom software only for the core 20% of your business that generates 80% of your value.
- Logistics: Buy QuickBooks for accounting. Build a custom routing engine that saves 15% on fuel.
- E-Commerce: Buy Shopify for the storefront. Build a custom warehouse picking app that eliminates shipping errors.
The Verdict
Off-the-shelf software is like renting a furnished apartment. It's easy, it's quick, but you can't knock down a wall to make the kitchen bigger.
Eventually, every growing business hits a wall where the software that got them here prevents them from getting there. That is the moment you stop buying and start building.
Build for your workflow, not the average.
Stop wrestling with rigid SaaS tools. Esseal designs custom software solutions that fit your business like a tailored suit.
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