An off-the-shelf AI subscription is a general tool you rent: it knows a lot in general, works the same for everyone, and charges per seat for as long as you use it. A custom system is built around how your business actually works, grounded in your knowledge and connected to your tools, and you own it. Bamco builds the second: a system that fits your operation rather than one you shape yourself around.
Information current as at 4 July 2026
An off-the-shelf AI subscription is a general-purpose tool. It is powerful, it knows a great deal in general, and it works the same way for every business that pays for it. That is its strength and its limit: it does not know your policies, your data, your customers or the specific way your work flows, and it will not do a task your way unless a person guides it every time. A custom system is the opposite. It is built around your operation, grounded in your knowledge, aware of your rules, and shaped to the exact job you need done, so it does the work rather than waiting to be steered.
A subscription is rented. You pay per seat, month after month, the bill rises as your team grows, and you are subject to the provider changing the price, the features or the terms. Stop paying and the capability vanishes. A custom system is owned. You pay to build it once, run it on modest hosting, and it does not send a larger invoice because you hired three more people or because a year has passed. Over the life of a business, that difference between renting a general tool by the head and owning a system outright is often larger than the build cost, and it is easy to miss when you only compare monthly prices.
Bring us the idea you already have, or book an audit and we map where the money is leaking. Either way, you deal directly with the senior team that designs and builds it.
Neither is always the answer. For general, standard work, a subscription is often the sensible choice, cheap, immediate, and good enough, and Bamco will tell you when that is the case. A custom system earns its place when the work is specific to your business, when it must be grounded in your own knowledge, when it needs to connect to the tools you already use, or when renting per seat has quietly grown into a cost that owning would end. The systems audit works out which side of that line your problem falls on, so you neither over-build for a standard task nor rent forever for one that should have been built.
Whether you can name exactly what you want built, or you just know something is leaking, the next step is the same conversation.