Here's something most technology vendors won't tell you: buying the right platform is the easy part. The hard part is what comes after — the implementation, the data migration, the change management, the testing, and the people who need to actually use it every day.
We see this pattern consistently across ERP, SaaS, and custom software engagements. Projects that struggle almost never fail because the technology was wrong. They fail because execution was underprepared, the skills weren't there, or the strategy wasn't clear before anyone opened a project plan.
The investment isn't the problem
Global IT spending is forecast to reach $6.15 trillion in 2026, up 10.8% from last year. Software is the fastest growing segment at 14.7%. The SaaS market sits at $428 billion. ERP is climbing toward $81 billion, with 70% of new deployments going cloud.
The money is there. What's missing is clarity on what to change and who is needed to change it.
Why seven out of ten transformations still miss
In 2026, around 70% of digital transformation initiatives still fail to fully meet their objectives. Gartner finds only 48% of projects hit their targets. BCG's study of more than 850 companies puts the success rate at 35%. These numbers have barely moved in a decade.
The reason is almost never the software. McKinsey's research finds the same pattern each time: culture and execution block outcomes more than technology does. Organisations that invest in cultural change alongside technical change see 5.3× higher success rates.
The skills shortage is getting worse. Gartner predicts that by 2026, the lack of digital skills will prevent 60% of organisations from executing their digital strategies. IDC projects the combined cost of IT skills shortages will reach $5.5 trillion globally. These aren't abstract workforce concerns — they show up directly in delays, overruns, and platforms that go live but never reach their potential.
ERP, SaaS, custom software — where each one actually fits
One of the most common mistakes is treating these as interchangeable. They're not. ERP is where your core operations live — finance, supply chain, HR. When it works well, it gives you a single source of truth. When it goes wrong, it's among the most expensive projects a company will run. Research puts the average ERP budget overrun at 35%, with 47% of implementations experiencing some form of overspend — most caused by underestimated staffing, scope creep, and data migration problems that weren't scoped at the start.
**SaaS **is where speed and specialisation live. The average enterprise now manages 897 applications, but only 29% are integrated with each other. That gap is where most of the value leaks. The growing challenge in 2026 is that SaaS tools are expanding faster than anyone's ability to manage them — governance and portfolio rationalisation are now as important as selecting the right tool.
Custom software is where real competitive differentiation lives. It handles the part of your business that's genuinely specific to you. The risk is that without engineering rigour, test automation, and UX discipline, custom development creates the technical debt that slows everything else down two or three years later. McKinsey found AI and automation can improve product manager productivity by 40% — but only in organisations that have already built a strong automation and testing foundation.
For SAP customers specifically, 2026 is the final practical window to begin S/4HANA migration before mainstream ECC support ends in 2027. Experienced consultants are already scarce — demand will only grow as the deadline approaches.
The honest conclusion
The businesses genuinely ahead right now aren't the ones with the biggest platforms or largest internal teams. They're the ones honest about where their skills gaps are and who they need around them to close those gaps. They treat specialist partners as an extension of their team, not a supplier managed at arm's length.
Constellation Research's 2026 outlook puts it plainly: organisations that will define the next five years are building ecosystems, not internal empires. The window is narrowing. The cost of delay is real and compounding.
If your business is sitting with a transformation backlog, an ERP that needs modernising, SaaS sprawl that needs rationalising, or custom software work that keeps getting deferred — the question isn't whether you can afford the expertise. It's whether you can afford to keep waiting on it.
Where is your biggest technology gap right now?
QualityBridge Consulting works with partners across ERP, SaaS, custom software, test automation, and technology strategy. Follow us on LinkedIn or reach out directly to start the conversation.
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