You probably know from personal experience how tough it can be to change from one service provider to another. Think about the last time you changed your Internet service or gym membership. It was probably a pain, and there’s a reason. Most vendors don’t want you to have a seamless transition from their product to a competitor’s.
Vendor lock-in happens with cloud computing just like it happens with other service providers. Some cloud service providers intentionally make it difficult to transition off their platforms. And the stakes are even higher if the vendor has access to your customers’ data.
When your business first adopts a new technology, it’s easy to overlook the problem of vendor lock-in. After all, you’re choosing the vendor because you like them and want to use their services. With a cloud service, you can become more efficient, reduce costs and improve your customer experience.
But once it’s time to renew your contract, the vendor in question might raise their prices or change their policies. If that happens, you need to make sure you can make a change without affecting your data or your client relationships.
“It’s not just privacy and security. It’s also — if I change my mind or it doesn’t work out, how do I move on?” says Robert Jenkins, CTO of Cloud Sigma, in a GigaOM article.
Having your business’s mission-critical systems and data at the mercy of a third-party vendor doesn't make sense, especially in this type of scenario.
“When you put a lot of your resources, a lot of your data in the cloud… you want to know that you can move all that away to another cloud provider, or even bring that back on premises, if that’s the exit strategy,” says Thomas Erl, CEO of Arcitura Education Inc. in a Forbes article.
Some cloud-based software companies use proprietary technology to lock businesses into using their products. It might be possible to transfer to a different system, but the process can interrupt customer services and can be costly.
“Cloud providers benefit from keeping things proprietary as long as possible, because it locks consumers into their environment,” Erl says.
Most types of software have some kind of proprietary nature, but businesses need to make sure the end result of the technology (the part of the technology that your customers interact with) isn’t proprietary. If it is, you risk the possibility of that coming back to bite you in the long term, potentially years after you may have ended a relationship with a vendor.
Think about electronically signed documents as an example. If your business gets documents signed online with a particular e-signature vendor, you want to be sure that those e-signed documents can be proven in court as valid even if you don’t have a relationship with that vendor anymore or if they went out of business.
One way to protect your business is to make sure you use software that adheres to global standards. Common, established standards give you the assurance that the technology you’re using is compatible with other similar vendors’ offerings. Most importantly, these standards ensure that a third-party expert can interpret the data you get back from the vendor.
“Standards give you the confidence that whatever happens in the future, the data you’ve created isn’t lost or questioned,” says John Harris, chief technology officer at cloud-based digital signature company SIGNiX. “Working with standards reduces your risk.”
It’s critical that you take control of the decision-making process and pick a vendor that places a priority on data flexibility as well as privacy.
It can be hard to figure out whether a vendor looking to lock you into their technology. Here are a few steps you can take to avoid vendor lock-in.
As you read this, you might have come to the disturbing realization that you’re already locked in to a software vendor. The easiest course of action is to say, “Oh well,” and keep on using that vendor, but that can be very dangerous. Every time you use that vendor’s services, the cost of switching vendors later increases.
Here are four simple steps to end the vicious cycle of vendor lock-in: