Technology plays a crucial role in driving efficiency, enhancing resident experiences, and improving profitability. However, some institutional owners and operators attempt to build and maintain their technology in-house—a decision that often leads to unforeseen challenges and underwhelming results. While the allure of custom solutions is strong, the reality is that building in-house tech usually proves to be a costly and resource-intensive detour from core business priorities.
Here's why building and maintaining in-house technology can be more of a liability than an asset:
Creating in-house technology involves steep initial investments. From hiring developers, designers, and project managers to purchasing necessary infrastructure, the expenses quickly add up. Beyond financial costs, the time spent on development delays the product's availability, potentially impacting operational efficiency and revenue. These delays can give competitors an edge, leaving your business lagging.
Developing technology is only the beginning. Continuous maintenance is required to ensure the software remains compatible with evolving systems and secure from vulnerabilities. Over time, technical debt—accumulated unresolved issues in the codebase—can spiral out of control, requiring costly overhauls. Scaling as user demands grow adds significant expense, whether for server upgrades or database optimisation.
The property industry is not immune to the global talent war in technology. Recruiting and retaining skilled developers and IT professionals is expensive and time-consuming. Even after onboarding, continual investment in training is necessary to keep teams up-to-date with evolving technologies. The turnover risk compounds these challenges, as knowledge gaps arise when employees leave.
Technology evolves at an unprecedented pace. Staying ahead requires constant vigilance, investment, and agility. Meanwhile, competitors leveraging third-party solutions benefit from providers who update their offerings to reflect the latest trends and innovations. For in-house teams, the lag in adaptation can result in a competitive disadvantage.
Unlike off-the-shelf solutions designed for flexibility, custom-built systems are often rigid. Making changes or adding features is slower, as in-house teams must allocate resources to each update. This lack of agility can hinder your ability to adapt to market shifts or implement new features quickly.
In-house tech projects frequently face scope creep, budget overruns, and missed deadlines. Without specialised expertise, teams may design flawed systems with vulnerabilities or inefficiencies, increasing the likelihood of project failure. Even when projects succeed initially, they may falter over time due to poor scalability or maintenance.
Developing and maintaining technology can distract your team from core business objectives. While property management is your expertise, managing a tech development team likely isn't. Every hour spent on technology is an hour diverted from growth-driving activities such as marketing, leasing, and improving tenant experiences.
Many in-house solutions are not designed with scalability in mind. As your portfolio grows or market demands shift, scaling these systems can be prohibitively complex and expensive. SaaS providers, by contrast, design their solutions to handle growth effortlessly.
Legal requirements like GDPR and ensuring robust cybersecurity measures demand significant in-house expertise. Falling short on either front can result in severe penalties, reputational damage, and data breaches. SaaS providers often come with pre-built compliance and security measures, reducing this burden.
Custom solutions take time—often much longer than anticipated. These delays postpone ROI and increase the risk that the market or your needs will evolve during the development cycle. By the time your system is ready, it may already be outdated.
In-house tech relies heavily on the expertise of your team. When key personnel leave, their knowledge of the system goes with them, creating bottlenecks and inefficiencies. Poor documentation exacerbates these issues, making future updates and troubleshooting even more challenging.
Tailored solutions can lead to over-customisation, which makes integrations or upgrades difficult. What begins as a bespoke system may eventually feel like a technological straitjacket, locking you into outdated processes that are difficult to modernise.
Developing features in-house often duplicates efforts already achieved by third-party providers. SaaS solutions spread development costs across multiple clients, reducing individual expenses and delivering highly polished, scalable products outperform homegrown systems.
Instead of diverting resources into building and maintaining your own technology, consider a proven rental operating system like Residently. Our platform is designed specifically for property managers and institutional owners, delivering:
While in-house technology development may seem appealing, the risks and costs far outweigh the potential benefits for most owners and operators. By leveraging a rental operating system like Residently, you can avoid the pitfalls of in-house tech, focus on your core competencies, and gain access to a platform designed to enhance the rental experience and drive better outcomes for your business.