On December 31, 2024, InVision shut down. If you had prototypes, boards, or design specs living in it, they were not archived or frozen for later. They were deleted. A company once valued near $2 billion turned off the lights, and everything its users had built on top of it went with it.
Your CRM is not a design tool, but the lesson transfers exactly. When you rent the software your business runs on, you are not the owner of anything except a login. The roadmap, the price, the feature set, and the off switch all belong to someone else. Most of the time that is fine, right up until the day it is not.
This post is about what changes when you own the source code instead. Not the decision of build versus buy, I covered that in why you should fork a CRM instead of building from scratch. This is about the advantage itself, and I am going to be honest about the tradeoffs too.
The renting reality nobody quotes you on
The sticker price is the part they show you. The trajectory is the part they do not.
SaaS prices rose about 12.2% in 2024, against general inflation of roughly 2.7%, according to pricing research tracked by GetPricePulse and SaaStr. That is more than four times the rate of everything else getting more expensive. And these are not anonymous averages. The same research tracked Salesforce raising Enterprise pricing 6% in 2025 after a 9% hike in 2023, with seat prices reaching around $500 a month, double what they were five years earlier, Slack up 20%, and Adobe's main plan up about 17%. These are the tools you cannot easily leave, which is exactly why they can do it.
It gets quieter and worse. A common new tactic is the credit multiplier: a task that costs you 10 credits today can cost 20 tomorrow, same sticker price, you just burn through your allowance twice as fast. And industry coverage from SaaStr notes that a majority of vendors now bundle AI features into your plan whether you asked for them or not, with no option to decline the bill. As one SaaStr piece put it plainly, the power has shifted decisively to the vendors.
I have written the full five-year math on this elsewhere, so I will just point you to what your CRM actually costs over five years and move on. The number is bigger than you think.
Price is not even the scary part
Price you can budget for. The thing you cannot budget for is the tool deciding your fate for you.
InVision deleted everyone's work on its own schedule. CloudNordic, a hosting provider, was hit by ransomware in 2023 and lost customer data with no way to restore it. Some of its customers reportedly never recovered. Microsoft retired Skype in 2025 and told everyone to move. None of those users did anything wrong. They just built on rented ground.
Your CRM holds your client relationships, your history, your pipeline, the actual memory of your business. On a rented platform, all of it lives on someone else's servers under someone else's terms, exportable as a CSV if you are lucky and they are still around to let you. That is the real exposure, and it does not show up on any invoice.
What ownership actually unlocks
Owning the source code is not a feeling. It is a specific set of moves you can make that a renter cannot.
Customize without asking permission. When the thing your agency does best runs into a tool that simply will not do it, a renter files a feature request and waits. An owner changes the code. Need something niche like the kind of referral tracking that actually works? You build it, on your schedule, the way you want it.
No forced updates that break your Monday. Renters get updates pushed at them, sometimes the kind that quietly break a client flow over the weekend. When you own it, updates are something you pull when you are ready, not something that happens to you. New features still ship, you just decide when to take them.
No surprise repricing. There is no per-seat tax that grows every time you hire, and no renewal email with a new number on it. You paid once. Hiring your tenth person costs the same as hiring your first.
True data ownership. Not "we will let you export." Own. You get full, direct access to your own database, which means you can actually go in and audit and clean it instead of trusting a vendor's reporting on data you cannot see.
The right to resell it. This is the one renters never get. When you own the code, you can rebrand it and run it for your own clients, which turns your CRM from a cost line into a product. That is the entire white-label playbook.
The clearest framing of all this I have seen comes from a piece by IGC on owning versus renting: the question is not whether to rent at all, it is whether you are renting systems that should belong to you. Their test is a good one. If the system encodes how your business specifically operates, and losing access to it would damage you, you should own it. A CRM is precisely that system.
Own your CRM. No subscriptions. Ever.
One payment. Full source code. Unlimited seats. Deploy anywhere, customize everything.
See what's includedThe honest tradeoffs
Owning is not magic, and anyone who tells you it is has something to sell. Here is what you take on.
You are responsible for the thing now. There is no vendor support desk to escalate to. If a bug shows up, you or your developer or your AI coding assistant fixes it. Updates are your job to pull and merge, which is why a good owned product ships a changelog you can walk through against your own copy rather than leaving you guessing.
I also want to be precise about what Seedly is. You own the full source code and you control the deployment, but it is not bare-metal self-hosting; the backend runs on Convex Cloud by default, so you get the ownership without personally babysitting database uptime. I walk through that full tradeoff, and whether you are even the right operator for ownership, in the six-question self-hosting framework.
Ownership trades convenience for control. That is the whole deal. For some people the convenience of SaaS is worth the rent, and that is a legitimate choice. For the operator who is tired of building their business on ground that can be sold, repriced, or shut off underneath them, control is worth more.
Owning it, in practice
Owning it is the whole idea behind Seedly. A complete agency CRM you buy once for a flat $1,499, source code and all. Unlimited seats, unlimited white-label client accounts, no renewal, no per-seat tax, no asking permission to change your own software. The roadmap, the price, and the off switch finally belong to you.
You can run the five-year numbers against what you pay now and tour the live product before you decide anything. But the real decision is simpler than any feature comparison. You can keep renting the memory of your business, or you can own it. After InVision, after every price hike email, I know which one I would pick.



