> When you buy, the tools you buy are designed to be integrated with[...]
This makes me question if you're speaking theoretical, or actually have any practical experience.
I've been part of about a dozen "buy it" projects now, and so rarely they've been "designed to be integrated with. A lot of the time it's deeply legacy systems that have a half-hearted api slapped on top to check that box, but once you start using it you notice that everything you want to do somehow requires contacting the vendor first.
Which dovetails into an issue that, although vendors will give you the impression that their system is well tested and widely deployed, it all too often ends up being a lie. We've had quite a few instances where vendors have sold us what turned out to be something they were still building.
This makes me question if you're speaking theoretical, or actually have any practical experience.
I've been part of about a dozen "buy it" projects now, and so rarely they've been "designed to be integrated with. A lot of the time it's deeply legacy systems that have a half-hearted api slapped on top to check that box, but once you start using it you notice that everything you want to do somehow requires contacting the vendor first.
Which dovetails into an issue that, although vendors will give you the impression that their system is well tested and widely deployed, it all too often ends up being a lie. We've had quite a few instances where vendors have sold us what turned out to be something they were still building.