Decision Framework
Build vs. Buy vs. AI: How to Decide
The right answer depends on your situation. Here's the framework Code and Trust uses when a client asks this question.
When should a business buy software instead of building it?
A business should buy off-the-shelf software when the process is standard, not differentiating, and a mature product exists that covers 90%+ of the use case. HR platforms, email, accounting software, and basic CRM are almost always better bought than built. Building custom makes sense when your process is unique, off-the-shelf tools require $50K+/year in licensing, or vendor lock-in creates unacceptable risk.
The Three-Way Comparison
Off-the-shelf software wins on speed and initial cost but loses on fit and long-term cost. Custom software wins on fit and long-term ownership but costs more upfront. AI implementation is a third option — often cheaper than custom software and better-fitting than off-the-shelf for process-heavy operations. The right choice depends on whether your process is standard, unique, or repetitive-and-scalable.
| Factor | Off-the-Shelf | Custom Build | AI Implementation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Initial Cost | Low ($0–$500/mo) | High ($25K–$200K+) | Medium ($30K–$80K) |
| Time to Deploy | 1–4 weeks | 8–24 weeks | 8–12 weeks |
| Fit to Your Process | 60–80% fit | 95–100% fit | 85–95% fit |
| Long-Term Cost | High (compounding SaaS fees) | Low (own it outright) | Low (own the model) |
| Flexibility | Limited to vendor roadmap | Total control | High for target processes |
| Lock-in Risk | High (data + workflow dependency) | None | Low |
A Decision Framework for Operations Leaders
Use this 5-question framework to determine which path fits your situation. If you answer 'yes' to questions 1-2, buy. If 'yes' to 3-4, build custom. If 'yes' to 5, implement AI. Most large operations benefit from a combination of all three — AI automating the repetitive processes, off-the-shelf handling standard back-office functions, and custom software for the differentiating workflows.
Is this a standard business process that every company runs the same way?
Does a mature product exist with 200+ customers in your industry?
Is this process unique to how your business operates?
Would vendor lock-in create unacceptable business risk?
Is this process repetitive, high-volume, and rule-based?
How AI implementation changes the build vs. buy decision
AI implementation creates a third option that didn't exist 3 years ago: instead of buying a SaaS tool or building custom software, you automate the underlying process with AI. This costs less than custom software ($30K–$80K vs. $80K–$200K), is faster (8–12 weeks vs. 16–24 weeks), and produces better results for repetitive, rule-based operations than either traditional approach.
$30K–$80K
Typical AI implementation cost
vs. $80K–$200K custom build
8–12 wks
Time to deploy AI automation
vs. 16–24 weeks custom
40–70%
Labor cost reduction on targeted process
industry average
Frequently asked questions
What if we need both custom software and AI?
That's the most common outcome. Typically: AI automates 2-3 high-volume processes (40-70% cost reduction each), off-the-shelf handles accounting and HR, and one custom build creates the differentiated workflow that defines your operation.
How long should we expect to use custom software before it pays off?
Plan for 5+ year use. Custom software's total cost of ownership beats enterprise SaaS in year 3 for most use cases at $60K+ build cost. Before year 3, SaaS is often cheaper.
What are the biggest mistakes in the build vs. buy decision?
Building something you could buy (over-engineering) and buying something you can't customize enough (under-investing in a core process). Both waste money. The test: is this process differentiating, or is it shared across every business in your industry?
Can you help us decide before we commit to anything?
Yes — it's part of the AI audit. We'll tell you honestly whether AI, custom software, or off-the-shelf is the right answer for each process we audit.
Not sure which path is right?
An AI Audit maps every process, identifies what to automate vs. buy vs. build custom, and gives you a prioritized roadmap. Most clients find $150K–$400K in annual savings in the first audit.