Most outsourcing decisions are easy to justify. Reduce costs, ship faster, let the team focus on what matters. Individually, they’re often the right call.
The problem is that the impact of these decisions compounds. What starts as offloading commodity work can quietly become ceding the thing that makes you different–not through one bad decision, but through a dozen reasonable ones. I call this Competency Drift: the gradual hollowing out of strategic capability through incremental outsourcing.
I touched on this idea in my piece on Core Competencies vs. Core Capabilities: A Framework for Strategic Decision-Making, but it deserves more attention. The pattern is subtle, and the warning signs are easy to miss. By the time it’s obvious, course correction, if it’s even possible, is expensive.
The Anatomy of Drift
Competency Drift rarely announces itself. The first step is usually defensible. Sometimes so is the second and third. You outsource the infrastructure layer because managing servers isn’t your differentiation. Fine. Then you outsource the data pipeline because your team should focus on the models, not the plumbing. Reasonable. Then you outsource the model training because your real value is in the feature engineering and business logic. Still arguably sensible.
Then one day you realize the entire stack that delivers your “core capability” is a thin integration layer on top of vendors. Your team configures. They don’t build. And the thing that made you different? It now lives on someone else’s product roadmap. Each decision passed the sniff test in isolation. The cumulative effect is strategic erosion. This pattern is insidious because the drift is gradual enough that no single decision ever feels like a turning point. The teams closest to the work adapt incrementally. New hires never knew it was different. And by the time leadership notices, rebuilding internal capabilities often requires years of investment.
Examples in the Wild
At what point does “focus on higher-value work” quietly become “we no longer know how this works”? Here are 2 examples from an e-commerce aggregator:
- Data Pipeline Ownership – When you acquire dozens of brands, you inherit their data: transactions, inventory levels, advertising spend, customer behavior across marketplaces. One of your edges is what you can see across the portfolio and how fast you can act on it. But building connectors to every marketplace API is tedious work, so you outsource the ingestion pipelines. Then the transformation layer goes to a managed ETL vendor because your team should focus on analysis, not plumbing. Then the warehouse itself goes next, because that’s “just infrastructure.” Each decision is defensible. But now your data science team submits tickets to understand why numbers don’t match. Your analysts wait on vendor support to debug pipeline failures. Spinning up a new analysis now requires navigating multiple vendor contracts and SLAs. What used to be an internal conversation has become an external negotiation. The data that was supposed to be your strategic asset lives behind walls you don’t (fully) control.
- Operational Tooling and Workflows – Your real edge isn’t just acquiring brands, it’s what you do with them after. You’ve built a playbook: how to optimize listings, when to adjust pricing, where to cut costs or optimize the supply chains. That operational knowledge is what turns mediocre acquisitions into profitable ones. But building internal dashboards takes time, so you buy a reporting tool. Then you bring in a workflow vendor to automate the repetitive decisions. Then you integrate a pricing optimization service because it’s faster than building your own. Each tool solves a real problem. Stitch enough vendors together and soon your “proprietary playbook” is just a sequence of vendor workflows that your competitors can also buy. Your defensible moat has become a procurement exercise.
While this is happening to your systems, something else is happening to your people. When building becomes configuring, the work changes, and so do the people. Engineers who joined to solve hard problems start spending their days on vendor support tickets and integration debugging. Your hiring profile shifts toward ‘integrators’ over ‘builders.’ Your team’s instinct when facing a new problem becomes ‘what vendor handles this?’ rather than ‘how would we solve this?’ The organizational muscle for building atrophies, and with it, the confidence that you could build if you needed to. The warning signs are often easier to see in the systems than in the culture. But both are sending you the same message.
The Warning Signs
Competency Drift is easiest to reverse when you catch it early. These are the signals that should trigger a harder conversation:
- Your roadmap is hostage to theirs. This shows up two ways. First, the slow bleed: you’re waiting on a vendor to ship a feature before you can pursue a market opportunity. That’s not partnership, that’s dependency. Second, the ambush: API deprecations, platform migrations, pricing restructures, acquisition-driven pivots. These aren’t edge cases; they’re the normal lifecycle of vendor relationships. When they happen, your team drops what they’re working on to keep the trains running. That integration you outsourced to “save time” now demands a quarter of engineering effort to migrate to v2. The migration often doesn’t make your product better. It just maintains parity. Your competitors who own that layer are shipping features. You’re rewriting glue code without being part of the decision.
- Your teams configure instead of build. There’s nothing wrong with configuration, until it’s the only muscle your team exercises. When your engineers spend their days tuning parameters in vendor dashboards rather than understanding the underlying systems, you’re not just outsourcing work. You’re outsourcing learning. The institutional knowledge that would let you innovate or even switch vendors is quietly atrophying.
- You can explain that it works, but not why. This is the most dangerous signal. When your competitive advantage becomes a black box you operate but don’t understand, you’ve lost control of it. You can’t meaningfully improve it, debug it under pressure, or evolve it as quickly as might be necessary to respond to market shifts. You’re renting your differentiation, and the landlord can change the terms.
- The “original experts” are gone. Outsourcing decisions often coincide with attrition or reorgs. The people who understood why you built it that way, what the edge cases were, what the original constraints were have moved on. What remains is operational knowledge without strategic context.
The goal isn’t to insource everything or treat vendors as adversaries. Outsourcing and vendors are often the right move. And sometimes drift reveals that a capability wasn’t as strategic as you thought. Maybe the market shifted, or you were wrong about what made you different. That’s fine. The problem is drifting without noticing. The answer is to ask better questions before the impact of decisions compounds.. When an outsourcing decision comes up, the immediate ROI calculation isn’t enough. You need to ask what this decision looks like after three more like it. Are we buying speed, or giving away ground? If the answer isn’t obvious, that’s the topic of conversation that requires a bit more examination.
Competency Drift isn’t about any single bad decision. It’s about the cumulative weight of reasonable decisions made without a clear view of where they’re leading. It’s about who your organization slowly becomes as the impact of those decisions compounds. The companies that maintain their differentiation aren’t the ones that refuse to outsource, they’re the ones that outsource intentionally, with a clear map of what they’re willing to rent and what they need to own. Every outsourcing decision should answer the question: are we buying speed, or selling differentiation?