Choosing a software house is a risk decision, not a design decision. Great pitch decks rarely predict delivery quality. What matters is how a team handles uncertainty, scope change, architecture tradeoffs, and post-launch ownership. If you evaluate only aesthetics and price, you optimize for the wrong signal.
The Selection Criteria That Actually Predict Delivery
Process Clarity
Can they explain discovery outputs, sprint cadence, and acceptance criteria in plain language? Teams with real delivery maturity can show structure without hiding behind jargon.
Architecture Reasoning
Ask why they recommend a stack, not just what stack they use. Strong teams discuss constraints: indexability, performance, integration limits, maintenance cost, and ownership model.
Risk Communication
You need a partner who surfaces risk early, even when uncomfortable. If every answer is 'no problem', expect surprises later.
Portfolio Review: What to Look For
- •Can they explain business context behind each project?
- •Do they show process and tradeoffs, not only visuals?
- •Are examples relevant to your complexity level?
- •Can they discuss what they would improve in past projects?
Contract and Scope Signals
Healthy contracts define assumptions, dependencies, and change handling. Weak contracts rely on broad promises and unclear acceptance. You should know what is included, what is excluded, and how decisions are documented.
Questions You Should Ask in Every Vendor Interview
- 1.How do you handle changing requirements after sprint two?
- 2.What parts of this scope are highest risk and why?
- 3.How do you prove quality before production release?
- 4.Who owns maintenance and incident response after launch?
- 5.How do you avoid technical debt in MVP phase?
Red Flags
- •No clear QA and release process
- •No monitoring strategy post-launch
- •Unrealistic timelines without assumptions
- •No named ownership for architecture decisions
- •No plan for documentation and handover
The True Cost of Choosing Wrong
A weak partner does not only delay launch. It creates compounding cost: unstable release cycles, hidden rework, poor SEO foundation, and low team confidence. Recovery projects are usually more expensive than building correctly from the start.
Need a second opinion on a proposal? We can review scope, assumptions, and risk concentration before you sign.
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