Every enterprise architects we’ve worked including me has gone through this exercise. They bought a point solution — a system, a chatbot, an analytics tool and now a point AI solution — hoping it would solve a painful problem. It did. For about six weeks.
Then the integration bill showed up. Then the governance questions arrived. Then a second point solution was bought, and the two started fighting for access to the same data. A year later, the team had four vendors, three dashboards, and one very tired IT leader.
The pattern we keep seeing
Point solutions optimise for one step of a workflow. Orchestration optimises for the whole workflow. When you start with orchestration and plug specialised engines into it — document AI, browser automation, dashboards, calculators — you get three things that point-solution stacks never manage to deliver.
- A single audit trail across every decision an AI touches, end to end.
- One place to wire in new engines as the model landscape evolves — without re-architecting.
- A consistent integration story for your carrier, core, LOS, or PAS.
What ‘orchestration-first’ actually means
Orchestration-first is a posture, not a product category. The posture is: the workflow graph is the primary artefact. Everything else — document classification, data extraction, correspondence generation, desktop automation — is a node in that graph.
Once the workflow graph is the primary artefact, everything downstream gets easier. Observability becomes visual. Governance becomes structural. Adding a new capability becomes a one-node change rather than a six-week integration project.
The math that matters
Integration cost is quadratic in the number of systems. Orchestration cost is linear. In practice, we see the break-even point at the third point-solution — the moment where buying one more vendor costs more engineering than adopting a proper orchestration layer did in the first place. Most teams don’t notice the break-even point until they’re well past it.
If you are already deep in a point-solution stack
Do not throw it out. The orchestration layer treats your existing vendors as nodes. The migration is incremental: start by wrapping one workflow, prove the audit trail, and move the next.
This is the move we watch the fastest-moving operators make. They stop buying new vendors and start re-expressing their operations as a graph. A year later, the cost-to-change curve has inverted.