Skip to main content
  1. Contributor Content
  2. Features

5 Questions Every CIO Should Ask Before Adding Another Software Tool 

Add as a preferred source on Google
Computer, Electronics, Adult
Christina Morillo

In 2023, the average tech stack had 291 apps — that’s a lot of money going toward software expenses. In 2026, many enterprise tech stacks have become even more complex as organizations continue adding AI capabilities across their workflows. As vibe coding proliferates and SaaS platforms continue to grow in number, how does a leader know which applications are the right ones for their business right now? If they already have a bloated and confusing tech stack, how do they know what additions will help? And which ones will make things worse? 

Chief Information Officers (CIOs) and IT leaders at small and mid-market B2B organizations should ask the right questions before adding to their tech stacks. From integration to user adoption, cybersecurity to business impact, make sure you can answer these five questions with confidence before you use that company card to sign up for yet another platform.  

How will this tool integrate with the existing stack? 

This is an important question to start with. The value an app offers doesn’t mean as much if it can’t be connected to existing tools and data within your company. This makes vetting a new tool in the context of your existing tech stack a critical first line of defense. Regardless of its potential, it helps you decipher if an app has real value within your company right now. 

Recommended Videos

Apps have to be team players. They need to integrate with and support each other. If that doesn’t happen, you’ll end up with siloed information. When you’re looking at a new tool, make sure you think bigger than a hypothetical sense of value from a sales pitch. Clarify how a platform will connect to your core systems. How will it integrate with your data flows and overall workflows? Does a tool have open APIs? Prebuilt connectors? Clear integration requirements that you can compare to your company’s existing capabilities? 

Find a good systems integration checklist. Then use it to make sure you’re simplifying, not complicating, your tech stack with each new addition.  

Does this tool help or hurt security? 

Cybersecurity is a growing concern. New AI models are becoming more powerful, and new technology can be a weak link in your security chain. At the least, it expands the number of digital touchpoints where an attack can take place. 

Check every new product to see how it handles things like privileged access and password hygiene. Can it handle network-level threats if you have a hybrid or remote workforce?  

If you feel your stack has gotten too risky, you may also want to add a layer specifically focused on cybersecurity itself. A tool like CyberFOX can deliver enterprise-grade protection by centralizing things like privileged access management, password management and DNS security.  

Will the app have real users in the company? 

One of the biggest tech stack wastes comes from excellent tools sitting unused. Often, this comes from a disconnect between licensing and real user adoption within a company. When that happens, a tool becomes pure overhead. 

When considering a SaaS tool, look beyond potential results and leadership-focused sales pitches. Put yourself in your employees’ shoes. How intuitive is the user experience? Is there a strong onboarding sequence? In-app guidance as you go along? What factors will make this app a win, not just on paper but with your people as they go about their daily work? 

What is the real cost that a new app will create? 

When considering cost, don’t stop at the sticker price. Consider the true total cost of ownership that comes with a new piece of software. This includes things like: 

  • Implementation time 
  • Developing and deploying integrations 
  • Training and adoption initiatives 
  • Redundancy and overlap with other tools 
  • Potential long-term lock-in contract costs 

SaaS management platforms have shown how much sprawling, under-governed tech stacks and shadow spend can quietly increase costs. Whether it’s a surprise renewal, an unexpected add-on or anything else, there are a lot of ways your tech stack costs can add up. Looking at the true costs up front can help mitigate that problem.   

How will this tool impact business outcomes in measurable ways? 

Every tech tool comes with some kind of claim to boost revenue or reach a certain ROI. Push beyond those generic benchmarks and ask more specific questions. What company KPIs will a tool help you reach? How long will that take? How can you measure if it’s working? 

Asking these questions up front is well worth it. The inconvenience only amplifies if you deploy a new tool and then start wondering if it’s working where you need it to deliver results. Look for hard outcomes, like churn reduction or operational savings, that you can measure to show clear benefits to a new piece of software over time. 

Adding Effective Tools to Your Tech Stack 

Tech stacks too easily bloat. They become disorganized and disconnected. When a CIO adds a tool into the mix based on its own individual merit, it often has minimal effect, and even worse, it can add to the confusion. 

IT leaders should approach each tech addition thoughtfully and holistically. From security risks to true costs to business impact, ask the tough questions up front. That way, you can deploy each platform and train your team to embrace it with confidence of effectively creating a measurable impact over time. 

Digital Trends partners with external contributors. All contributor content is reviewed by the Digital Trends editorial staff.
Chris Gallagher
Chris Gallagher is a New York native with a business degree from Sacred Heart University, now thriving as a professional…
Topics
How AI Tools Are Changing Product Development in Modern Business 
Plant, Vegetation, File

AI-assisted tools are compressing the time between idea and launch, which means the competitive advantage is moving away from raw execution and toward product judgment, visual identity, and built-in social behavior. 

In the modern landscape, when a consumer product gets hundreds of thousands of people in a matter of weeks, the result is usually chalked up to luck or simply good timing. These are subtle ways in which others will dismiss the success of the product as a fluke; clearly not something that was orchestrated, but rather something that just so happened to be in the right place at the right time. The story comes down to a timely idea, a well-placed and well-phrased post, or an algorithm that cooperated, with the builder put in the role of a fortunate passenger and little more. 

Read more
Why Window-Mounted Fresh Air Systems Are Gaining Attention Among Renters 
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

As modern homes become more sealed and indoor living becomes more intensive, healthy air is becoming a practical home comfort issue rather than a niche wellness concern.  

With remote work keeping more residents indoors for extended stretches, heightened focus on indoor air cleanliness has intensified amid seasonal pollen surges, wildfire haze and other outdoor contaminants. In response, a growing number of companies, including Cozeware, are exploring ways to bring fresh outdoor air indoors without requiring costly renovations or permanent installation, particularly for apartment dwellers and renters. 

Read more
The Family AI Household Economy: AI’s Emerging Consumer Opportunity 
Body Part, Finger, Hand

Rather than focusing solely on workplace productivity, a new generation of AI companies is exploring how intelligent household systems could influence family decision-making, consumption patterns, budgeting, and everyday spending. 

For much of the past decade, artificial intelligence has been framed as a workplace technology. Companies have focused on helping professionals write faster, analyze data, automate workflows, and improve productivity. 

Read more