From jugaad to systems: The shift Indian startups can’t ignore

by Incbusiness Team

India celebrates the scrappy founder. The one who bootstrapped from a bedroom, duct-taped a business together with WhatsApp groups and spreadsheets, and made it work against all odds. Yes, resourceful founders deserve our respect, but at some point, the duct tape becomes the architecture.

But jugaad can only take you so far.

Between juggling hundreds of disconnected tools because “they just work” and vibe-coding your own solution for anything and everything, founders need to realize there is a middle ground. Open-source, highly customizable business solutions like Odoo can deliver ERP-level management capabilities without bankrupting a startup.

Odoo is an open-source business management platform that brings your CRM, sales, inventory, accounting, HR, project management, and even your website under one roof. Not as a bundle of loosely connected tools, but as a genuinely integrated system where every module talks to the others in real time.

But despite the overwhelming evidence indicating the benefits of an integrated system early on, most founders make the mistake of relying on jugaad for way too long. Here is why.

Why jugaad makes complete sense (at first)

When starting out, capital is everything. Spending on software subscriptions while still figuring out your PMF feels genuinely irresponsible. You are in this for the long run, so you need to keep it sustainable, right?

So, you use what you can get your hands on. For the first few months, your focus isn’t operational efficiency but market validation. You get orders out. You track money. You coordinate the team. There's no visible crisis, and hence no urgency.

But the problem begins when the jugaad approach becomes the mindset. Because while you're busy with the same old processes, your business is scaling anyway.

The operational debt nobody talks about

No startup exists in a vacuum; they always need a system.

When companies use multiple software solutions or manual workarounds to manage everyday operations, they create friction and complexity that bottleneck scalability.

The need for a system doesn’t go away when your startup doesn’t have one; instead, you become the system. When data is scattered across silos and systems, you (or someone you are paying) manually move information between them. Decisions are made based on gut feeling and rough estimates. People are hired to fill roles that wouldn’t exist if an integrated system was in place.

The real cost of jugaad tech isn't the Rs 500 per month you saved on software. It's the three hours a day you spend being the system, the decisions you delayed because the data wasn't ready, and the growth you quietly stopped chasing because operations felt unmanageable.

Because systems aren’t a reward for scaling

And the real reason why startups struggle with getting systems up and running isn’t the perceived upfront costs or the need for operational agility. Instead, it is a mindset problem.

There's a deeply embedded belief in the Indian founder community that goes: "We'll put proper systems in place once we grow."

It needs to die.

Growth doesn’t wait for a system; it exposes the absence of one. The chaos doesn't get any easier to untangle at Rs 5 crore than it was at Rs 1 crore. More people, more data, more habits to break, more stakeholders to convince. The founders who try to retrofit integrated operations into a scaled business spend six to 12 months in painful migration hell.

Investing in a system becomes all the more difficult to justify when a founder has already scaled their business on jugaad tech.

The answer isn’t no jugaad, but applied jugaad

The true essence of the jugaad mindset is resourcefulness. Founders need to have the mindset to find the right systems, not one to ignore having a system at all. If being resourceful is what you care about the most, then focus on systems that give you the most bang for your buck. Startups don’t need to dabble with a full-size ERP; this is where most of their fears about costs and complexity come from.

The current tech environment allows for plenty of affordable and easy-to-implement solutions. Open-source platforms like Odoo let you run your entire business online at a fraction of what enterprise-grade tools cost. We're talking about something that replaces five separate subscriptions and eliminates the glue work entirely. A few thousand rupees a month for a system that lets your business scale isn’t a splurge.

The bottom line

The next chapter of Indian entrepreneurship won't be won by who hustles hardest. It'll be won by who builds the most efficient systems. Jugaad was the right answer when resources were the constraint. For most founders reading this, resources are no longer the constraint — the thinking is.

If your business can't run without you being the glue holding six tools together, you haven't built a business. You've built a dependency.

The question was never whether you can afford integrated operations. It's whether you can keep affording not to have them.

(Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of YourStory.)

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