The consolidation pitch isn't new. The architecture that delivers it is.
Every vendor in this category has a consolidation story. Every consolidation story sounds plausible until you unpack what's actually being consolidated. Most of them are billing consolidation — 8 contracts become one — without the architectural consolidation. The 8 sub-products still don't talk to each other internally; they just bill from the same purchase order.
TeamSync's consolidation is structural. The records platform, the AI copilot, CLM, eSignatures, eDiscovery, workflow, capture, and external collaboration share the same identity model, the same audit ledger, and the same data structures. Inside the platform there's nothing to integrate. That's the architectural answer that makes the consolidation actually deliver.
Talk to a solutions engineer · Read the CFO page · Calculate your TCO
What "structural consolidation" actually means.
There are 3 depths of consolidation. Most platforms claim depth-one or depth-2 and call it depth-three.
| Depth | What it actually is | Where most platforms are |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Billing | One contract, one PO, one renewal | Most consolidated suites |
| 2. Identity | One IdP integration across the products | Some consolidated suites |
| 3. Architectural | One platform, one audit chain, one data structure across capabilities | TeamSync |
Depth-one and depth-2 consolidations look identical from the procurement team's perspective. The difference shows up in operations: the 8 integrations that depth-one and depth-2 still need are the source of every "why is this not working" call the IT team gets at 3am.
What changes at depth three.
When the records platform, the AI copilot, CLM, eSignatures, and eDiscovery are capabilities on the same platform — sharing the same audit chain, the same identity model, the same data structures — the operational picture is different.
| Workflow | At depth 1–2 (billing-only) | At depth 3 (TeamSync) |
|---|---|---|
| Contract triggers a workflow that updates a record | CLM → integration → ECM → integration → BPM | One workflow, native composition |
| AI answers a question grounded in a record | AI → integration → search index → integration → ECM → re-permission check | One retrieval, one permission check |
| Hold reaches into the AI corpus | Hold tool → integration → search index → no audit | Native — hold respects retrieval and writes to audit |
| Audit covers every capability uniformly | Reconciliation across 8 audit logs | One chain, one query |
| New capability composed across existing ones | Integration project | Configuration |
The compounding benefit is real. Each new workflow that composes across capabilities is faster and cheaper to build than the last.
The TCO math.
The savings shape varies by company size, but the pattern is consistent. Year-3 savings come from 3 categories.
| Category | What's saved | Typical share of savings |
|---|---|---|
| Vendor-contract consolidation | 8 separate contracts collapsed | 50–60% |
| Integration-FTE recovery | The team that maintained the inter-vendor integrations | 25–30% |
| Audit + compliance team productivity | Cross-overlay control reuse, generated evidence packs | 15–20% |
Order of magnitude:
| Company shape | Typical year-3 savings |
|---|---|
| Mid-market (1,000–5,000 employees) | $1.5M–$3M |
| Upper mid-market (5,000–20,000) | $4M–$10M |
| Large enterprise (20,000+) | $12M–$40M |
What you keep.
The consolidation conversation usually triggers 2 anxieties — feature loss and operational disruption. Both are answerable.
Feature parity.
Each of TeamSync's 16 capabilities is benchmarked against the best-of-breed vendor in its category. The records platform is benchmarked against OpenText. CLM against Ironclad. eSignature against DocuSign. eDiscovery against Relativity. AI search against Glean. The capabilities aren't subtracted versions of the leaders — they're competitive on capability, with the architectural advantage of running on the same platform.
For the specific capability comparisons, see the alternatives section.
Operational continuity.
The migration runs in stages. The hot tier (active records, current contracts, in-flight matters) moves first. The long tail moves on the natural cadence of legacy-vendor renewal cycles. At no point are you operating without a defensible records-of-record story.
For the eighteen-month migration shape, see the post-M&A consolidation page — the same programme structure works for non-M&A consolidations.
How customers compare TeamSync for consolidation.
The consolidation conversation usually compares against:
- Microsoft Purview + M365 — strong on M365-resident content; the cross-source records-of-record and the cryptographic-audit story are weaker
- OpenText Cloud Editions — broad legacy ECM footprint; the modern AI copilot and the per-cluster pricing model are weaker
- Hyland (OnBase + Alfresco) — flexible legacy; the platform-platform architecture and the cryptographic audit are weaker
- In-house stitching — most flexible; the integration-FTE cost is what's being escaped
For specific comparisons: - TeamSync vs OpenText - TeamSync vs SharePoint + M365 - TeamSync vs Hyland OnBase - TeamSync vs Box
Read further.
- CFO — one platform, one bill — the financial case
- CIO post-M&A — document estate consolidation — the eighteen-month programme structure
- Capabilities — the 16 capabilities, one platform
- Vendor consolidation + cost reduction — the use case — the business-case template