June 23, 2021
3
MIN READ

The Dark Side of SaaS: Part 2

SaaS Insights

In this second of our two-part blog, we dig into the “dark side” of the flexibility, choice and freedom SaaS affords.

by
Rob Glickman

In Part One, we covered the birth of SaaS, resulting transformation of the software landscape, and how businesses have taken full advantage of SaaS apps to drive their business.

SaaS Chaos**

SaaS’s runaway success, combined with its flexibility and ease of purchase, is starting to cause problems for SMBs. If purchases can come from anywhere – as easy for an intern to click and buy as a CIO – then visibility and control over those assets is almost impossible. Separate teams trial and buy the tools that work for them, with little consideration for what SaaS the company might already be paying for, and whether new apps will complement or compete with them. The result is that 30% of a company’s SaaS spend is wasted on unused seats, duplicate or redundant SaaS.  As SMBs scale, new revenue and growth is favoured over efficiency, and a bit of wastage on SaaS is acceptable collateral damage. But at some point, businesses need to start taking SaaS waste seriously.

It’s never too early, as poor SaaS management leads to major problems that only get worse as companies grow. These problems come from all angles. Software that is bought without a strategy can actually divide teams, as different departments employ different software to achieve their individual KPIs, making workstreams siloed and fragmented. It means teams are no longer able to collaborate or appreciate the larger customer journey, something that often manifests itself in a disjointed and frustrating customer experience.  

This doesn’t just damage customer relationships, but fosters resentment among teams, too. It’s common for other departments to push back against finance teams, who are seen as always chasing them for invoices, or demanding more visibility and control over new SaaS purchases. Meanwhile, finance teams face long hours of pointless admin as they try to reconcile invoices and unexpected costs. That unrewarding busywork is a major detractor from job satisfaction and company culture, causing valuable employees to churn.

Perhaps even more troubling is the security risk that comes from sharing data across so many cloud-based systems. Employees at any level can sign up to software which stores sensitive customer and company information – software the IT team might not even know about.  When those employees leave or move teams, that data can fall through the cracks. In the era of GDPR and the massive fallout from the misappropriation of user data, that represents a significant risk. After all, businesses might be able to pay-off the (usually massive) fines; regaining customer trust and brand credibility is another story.

Whichever way you look at it, the costs of SaaS – both financial and personal – are getting too big for businesses to bear. For most SMBs, it’s now the second biggest expense behind payroll. But payroll has whole teams devoted to managing, with the tech, tools and processes to make it more efficient. Very few businesses have given the same thought to how they manage SaaS. That lack of strategy means it’s spiralling, becoming a resource drain, and stopping companies from innovating, scaling or working collaboratively. 

Back to black box IT?**

That internal chaos is a reflection of the wider SaaS market. SaaS has not only scaled, but sprawled in the last ten years.  In 2011, software luminary Marc Andreesen famously said that “software is eating the world,” – and looking at the fragmented, chaotic SaaS landscape today, what software regurgitated isn’t pretty. It’s become a Wild West, with over 50,000 softwares jostling for attention in overcrowded and overlapping market segments. There are over 7000 marketing SaaS alone.  

Chasing ever-smaller audiences in those crowded verticals, vendors resort to shady tactics like unclear pricing, hidden costs and add-ons, and a maze of confusing options to obstruct cancellation. On the other end of the spectrum, Salesforce – the company that started it all – now has a team actually dedicated to helping its customers spend less on their subscriptions, which they recognise are becoming unwieldy.  And while that’s an admirable individual initiative, it’s just firefighting. It’s not a sustainable solution to a growing, industry-wide problem.

It’s a discouraging picture. Businesses are starting to look at this cluttered, over-saturated tech landscape and wondering how to make sense of it. One way they respond to it is to come full-circle, and move software control back into the IT department. In the process, they regain oversight on software, finances and data. But it comes at the cost of agility, nimbleness and openness.

In an IT-regulated SaaS system, security wins over functionality. Instead of the network of best-in-class solutions that defined the 2010’s, businesses will start reverting to heavyweight product suites that are less agile, but more reliable. The result will be that the take-up for new software will be slow, and available licences scarce. Gone are the days of your sales team getting excited about trying out new SaaS to help them convert more leads, or marketing discovering an email platform that makes ABM easy. It’s a return, instead, to the dark rooms of an isolated tech stack. The likelihood is that as requests for new SaaS are denied,  password-sharing and shadow SaaS will start to creep in, causing more compliance problems. And as employees start to feel stifled, they might resent their company for moving away from the freedom of SaaS. It represents a massive step backwards for software, and an end to the era of democracy that Salesforce ushered in. 

SaaS management - The way forward**

To avoid over-correcting, we need to instead think critically about what the next generation of SaaS should look like. 

What’s needed is a consistent management system for SaaS. While spend management can help ease some of the burden for finance teams chasing invoices, it doesn’t give a view of SaaS assets beyond a line item on a credit card bill. Instead, businesses urgently need a way to gain visibility and control over SaaS assets across their whole lifecycle – from evaluation to purchase, management and cancellation

Finance teams, at the nexus of all SaaS spend, have the opportunity to take the reins and implement processes that, rather than restricting control and preventing creativity, add value to the business. With thoughtful and robust SaaS management processes, they can gain full visibility over subscriptions, figure out which purchases are driving ROI, and implement workflows to reduce wasted man hours and team tension. 

Only with intelligent SaaS management can businesses continue to use SaaS in the way it was intended — as a democratising innovation which saves money and encourages collaboration between teams.

At Cledara, we’ve seen first-hand the relief - yes, relief - our clients feel as we help them build the framework for managing their SaaS more successfully. Twenty years after the ‘no software’ revolution started, the SaaS applications industry is going through significant growing pains. But that means it’s time to evolve, not go backwards. We’re empowering SMBs to do exactly that. 

To learn more about the hidden costs of SaaS and how to manage them better, scroll down to subscribe to our blog!


Contents

Contents

The software management solution for finance teams.

Learn more

Subscribe to our newsletter

Receive the latest insights in your inbox

Rob Glickman

Rob is a software veteran with executive experience from some of the world’s leading technology companies including eBay, PayPal, Symantec and SAP.

Share this post

Subscribe to our newsletter and stay informed on the latest SaaS insights

Sign up

Explore more

The 15 Fastest-Growing SaaS Tools Right Now

Lovable grew 2,089%. Claude grew 1,728%. Here are the 15 fastest-growing SaaS tools, ranked by real transaction growth.
Read more

OpenAI vs Anthropic: The Real Spending Data Behind the AI Race

Cledara's transaction data reveals the moment Anthropic overtook OpenAI in enterprise spend, and what the Pentagon controversy means for how companies choose AI providers.
Read more

Datadog vs New Relic vs Grafana: What Companies Actually Spend on Observability

Datadog costs $30,809/year on average. Here is how observability spending compares across Datadog, New Relic, and Grafana in 2026.
Read more

Why Your Company Needs SaaS Management

The median company has 25 SaaS subscriptions. The top 10% have 49 or more. Here is why every company needs SaaS management.
Read more

What Engineering Teams Actually Spend On: The Data Behind the Tools

From Datadog at $30,809/year to Cursor at $5,857, here is what engineering teams actually spend on their tools.
Read more

UK vs US vs Europe: How SaaS Spending Differs by Region

US companies spend $349K on SaaS per year on average, nearly double the UK. Here is how software purchasing patterns differ across regions.
Read more

How AI Coding Tools Are Reshaping Engineering Spend

Engineering teams are spending 3x more on AI coding tools than they were 14 months ago. The data behind the developer tooling revolution.
Read more

The 50 Most Popular SaaS Tools in 2026, Ranked by Real Purchases

The definitive ranking of the 50 most popular SaaS tools in 2026, based on real transaction data, not surveys.
Read more

AI is Eating the SaaS Budget: How AI Tools Went from 8.8% to 26.4% of All Purchases

AI tools grew from 8.8% to 26.4% of all SaaS transactions in just 14 months. Here is what the spending data reveals about the AI takeover.
Read more

2025: The Year Software Management Got Harder And How Cledara Made It Easier

What changed, what we built, and what it means for Finance teams.
Read more

SaaS Management: Why You Need It, When to Implement It, and the Disasters That Happen Without It

Learn why SaaS management matters, the triggers that force adoption, and real disaster stories—plus a practical 30/60/90-day rollout plan.
Read more

The effects of funding on software spend

We were curious what really happens to software spend after a company raises funding, so we dug into the data to find out.
Read more

DocuSign vs. HelloSign (now Dropbox Sign): Which Is The Better eSignature Tool?

Choosing between DocuSign and Dropbox Sign requires understanding their distinct features, pricing models, and integration capabilities to determine which eSignature solution best aligns with your business needs.
Read more

8 Top Tools for Small Business Expense Tracking

Every dollar counts. Learn how the right expense tracking tools can help you cut waste, improve budgeting, and stay financially smart.
Read more

5 Best SaaS Management Tools to Keep Track of Your Apps

Discover the top 12 SaaS management tools to help you monitor your apps, optimize your tech stack, and slash software spend.
Read more