{
  "$type": "site.standard.document",
  "bskyPostRef": {
    "cid": "bafyreia5kezu563zuc6hxh4bv3zspu55mleogqewcl5j44vju3bulohp2q",
    "uri": "at://did:plc:kgbf2s4rqirwwntvajrwzlj7/app.bsky.feed.post/3mjpdsjcr2p32"
  },
  "coverImage": {
    "$type": "blob",
    "ref": {
      "$link": "bafkreibyn4fc6jnvt33zbzbjsxtrorp65k45cc2n44z3aiiv7ymdzkzpei"
    },
    "mimeType": "image/png",
    "size": 245784
  },
  "description": "AI makes building internal software easier than ever. But for revenue teams, the real challenge isn't in building but in running. ",
  "path": "/buy-vs-build-enablement-tools/",
  "publishedAt": "2026-04-17T16:28:35.000Z",
  "site": "https://www.salesenablementcollective.com",
  "textContent": "> **Should sales teams build their own tools?**\n\nAI coding tools and low-code platforms have made it genuinely tempting to build internal software rather than buy it. If your team can spin up a custom solution quickly, why pay for an enterprise platform?\n\nIt's a fair question, and this Allego brochure gives a fair answer. The challenge, it turns out, isn't building the tool. It's everything that comes after: security, governance, integrations, compliance, and keeping it running reliably once the business starts depending on it.\n\nFor revenue teams in particular, the stakes are high. Sales coaching, training, and content management sit right in the path of revenue execution; they're not the place to take on unexpected technical debt.\n\nDownload the brochure below for a clear-eyed look at where building makes sense, where it doesn't, and how to think about the trade-offs for your organization.",
  "title": "Should sales teams build their own tools?",
  "updatedAt": "2026-04-17T16:29:01.715Z"
}