Commercial Model
Structures the economic reasoning behind technology decisions, producing defensible
build-vs-buy analyses, total cost of ownership projections, and value capture frameworks.
Guiding Principle
"The cheapest option is rarely the least expensive. Model the full lifecycle before you commit."
Procedure
Step 1 — Option Identification
- Enumerate all viable options: build in-house, buy COTS, adopt open-source, hybrid.
- For each option, identify the vendor/project, licensing model, and support structure.
- Document switching costs and lock-in factors for each option.
- Classify options by strategic alignment (core vs context).
Step 2 — TCO Modeling
- Calculate direct costs: licenses, infrastructure, development effort (FTE-months).
- Calculate indirect costs: training, integration, maintenance, opportunity cost.
- Project costs over 3-year and 5-year horizons with growth assumptions.
- Include hidden costs: compliance, migration, vendor management overhead.
Step 3 — Value Analysis
- Map each option to business outcomes it enables or accelerates.
- Quantify value drivers: time-to-market, risk reduction, capability differentiation.
- Calculate ROI and payback period for each option.
- Assess strategic value beyond financial metrics (talent, ecosystem, flexibility).
Step 4 — Recommendation Synthesis
- Build a weighted decision matrix with financial and strategic criteria.
- Perform sensitivity analysis on key assumptions.
- Document the recommendation with explicit rationale and evidence tags.
- Include a risk-adjusted implementation timeline for the recommended option.
Quality Criteria
- TCO includes both direct and indirect costs over at least a 3-year horizon.
- Every cost estimate has an evidence tag and stated assumptions.
- Decision matrix uses weighted criteria agreed upon with stakeholders.
- Sensitivity analysis tests at least three key assumptions.
Anti-Patterns
- Comparing build costs against buy sticker price without including integration and maintenance.
- Ignoring opportunity cost of engineering time spent on non-differentiating capabilities.
- Treating vendor claims as evidence without independent verification.
- Making build-vs-buy decisions based solely on financial metrics without strategic context.