The software, settings, customisations and data your organisation runs on are valuable assets — as real as a building or a brand. The question most boards never ask is a simple one: if you walked away from a vendor tomorrow, what could you actually take with you? This is a five-minute, jargon-free look at the answer, and why it matters to the bottom line.
Right now, the things that make your business yours — your configurations, customisations, specifications and data — may be living inside systems you don't control. These are back-office assets: the part of the iceberg below the waterline that customers never see but the business runs on. That isn't a technology problem; it's an ownership and risk problem. The fix is straightforward and inexpensive: keep the assets that matter in a vault you hold the keys to, so changing vendors is a decision you make — not a hostage situation you're trapped in.
Most assets fall cleanly into one of two columns. The trouble is that the most valuable, hardest-to-rebuild ones — the bespoke configurations and the data — quietly end up on the wrong side.
Lock-in is never a single decision. Each convenient choice — let the vendor hold the configs, keep the specs in their portal, accept their export format — is reasonable on its own. Together they raise the cost and risk of ever leaving, a little more every year, until "let's switch" becomes "we can't afford to."
Illustrative — the shape is what matters, not the scale
Same six lenses you'd apply to any major asset decision — control, exit cost, compliance, spend, continuity, and leverage.
The headline price isn't the whole cost. Rented systems tend to charge in ways that scale with your success — more people, more usage, more fees — and the largest cost of all only appears the day you try to leave.
Every new hire and every busy quarter raises the bill — and the exit cost sits off the books until you need it most.
No per-person licence to multiply, and leaving is cheap because you already hold a full copy. Honest trade-off: you take on running it.
Owning is not free of effort. Someone has to look after the systems — in-house or through a partner. The win is not "no cost"; it's predictable cost, kept control, and no exit penalty. For most organisations the maths favours ownership the moment headcount grows or a vendor relationship sours.
None of these are exotic. They are the ordinary ways a vendor relationship turns into a liability — and how the same event plays out depending on who holds the assets.
Your everyday platforms — the place you store documents, share files and collaborate — are excellent at exactly that, and there's no reason to move it. Finished documents, contracts, proposals and presentations belong where they are easy to work on together.
The danger is narrower and specific: when the IP-bearing assets — the customisations, the settings, the specifications and the live data that the business actually depends on — live only inside a system you don't control. That's the line. Keep the office files where they're convenient; keep the crown jewels in a vault you own.
You don't need to rip anything out. You need to make ownership a standing rule and quietly bring the important assets home.
Ask one question across the business: for each system we rely on, what could we take with us if we left — and what would we lose? The list is usually shorter and scarier than expected.
Move the assets that matter — configurations, customisations, specs and data — into a vault your organisation owns, with a full history. Low cost, mostly a one-time setup.
From now on, "can we walk away with everything?" is a standard question in every vendor contract and renewal. Ownership becomes the default, not an afterthought.
Either your business owns the things that make it yours — or it rents them back, at a price that only goes up. The cheap moment to fix that is now, before the next renewal.