Build vs Buy in the Age of Vibe Coding


Why Teams Still Choose SaaS Platforms Like Salesforce or HubSpot

With modern frameworks, cloud infrastructure, and AI-assisted “vibe coding,” building software has never felt easier. A small team can spin up a CRM, dashboard, or workflow tool in weeks—not years.

So the natural question arises:

Why do companies still pay for SaaS platforms like Salesforce or HubSpot instead of building their own?

The answer is not ideological.
It is economic, operational, and long-term.

This article breaks down the real trade-offs—without hype.


What “Vibe Coding” Has Changed—and What It Hasn’t

Vibe coding (rapid development powered by frameworks, cloud services, and AI assistants) has dramatically reduced:

  • Initial development time
  • Boilerplate effort
  • Infrastructure setup friction

But it has not eliminated:

  • Long-term maintenance costs
  • Security, compliance, and reliability burden
  • Organizational complexity at scale

This is where the build-vs-buy decision becomes nuanced.


Why SaaS Platforms Exist in the First Place

Platforms like Salesforce and HubSpot are not just applications. They are operating systems for business functions.

They bundle:

  • Product features
  • Infrastructure
  • Security
  • Compliance
  • Ecosystem
  • Continuous evolution

What you are buying is time, risk reduction, and organizational leverage.


The Case for Building Your Own Platform

Let’s be honest—sometimes building does make sense.

Pros of Building In-House

1. Perfect Fit for Your Workflow
You design exactly what your team needs—no more, no less.

2. Full Control Over Data and Logic
No vendor constraints. No forced upgrades. No black boxes.

3. Lower Cost for Very Small User Bases
For 5–20 users, SaaS per-seat pricing can feel expensive compared to a simple internal tool.

4. Strategic Differentiation
If the platform is your product or core IP, owning it matters.


Cons of Building In-House

1. Hidden Long-Term Cost
Initial development is cheap.
Maintenance is not.

You own:

  • Bug fixes
  • Security patches
  • Performance tuning
  • Feature creep
  • Documentation
  • Onboarding

2. Talent Dependency Risk
If key engineers leave, system knowledge leaves with them.

3. Slower Evolution Over Time
SaaS platforms improve continuously.
Internal tools often stagnate once “good enough.”

4. Opportunity Cost
Every hour spent maintaining internal tools is an hour not spent on core business value.


The Case for SaaS Platforms

Pros of Using SaaS

1. Speed to Value
You can go live in days, not months.

2. Battle-Tested at Scale
Salesforce and HubSpot handle:

  • Millions of users
  • High availability
  • Global compliance
  • Edge cases you haven’t imagined yet

3. Ecosystem and Integrations
App marketplaces, APIs, partners, and community knowledge matter more as you grow.

4. Predictable Scaling
Cost increases are linear with users—not exponential with complexity.


Cons of Using SaaS

1. Cost at Large Scale
For hundreds or thousands of users, licensing costs add up.

2. Customization Limits
You adapt your process to the tool—not always the other way around.

3. Vendor Lock-In
Migration is rarely trivial.

4. Feature Bloat
You pay for capabilities you may never use.


Small User Base vs Large User Base: The Inflection Point

Small Teams (1–25 Users)

  • Building can be reasonable
  • SaaS feels expensive per seat
  • Flexibility matters more than robustness

Risk: You underestimate future complexity.


Mid-Size Teams (25–200 Users)

This is the danger zone.

  • Internal tools start to crack
  • Data consistency becomes painful
  • Permissions, audits, workflows matter

This is where SaaS often wins decisively.


Large Organizations (200+ Users)

  • SaaS platforms shine operationally
  • Governance, compliance, and integrations dominate
  • Custom development moves to extensions, not core systems

At this scale, not using SaaS is often more expensive than licensing it.


Long-Term Reality: Software Is a Living System

The biggest misconception in build-vs-buy decisions:

“Once we build it, we’re done.”

In reality:

  • Requirements change
  • Regulations evolve
  • Users grow
  • Integrations multiply
  • Security expectations rise

SaaS vendors amortize this complexity across thousands of customers.
You cannot—at least not cheaply.


A Pragmatic Hybrid Model (Often the Best Answer)

Many successful teams do this instead:

  • Buy the core platform (CRM, marketing, support)
  • Build lightweight extensions for unique workflows
  • Integrate via APIs, not forks
  • Avoid rebuilding commodity features

This preserves:

  • Speed
  • Reliability
  • Differentiation where it actually matters

Final Thought: Vibe Coding Is a Tool, Not a Strategy

Vibe coding makes building possible.
It does not automatically make building wise.

Choosing SaaS platforms like Salesforce or HubSpot is not about lack of skill—it is about focus.

Build where you differentiate.
Buy where you operate.

The most effective teams are not those who build everything—but those who choose carefully what is worth owning

Thanks for the comment, will get back to you soon... Jugal Shah