Open framework vs SaaS agent platforms
Use SaaS for generic tasks. Use Vocion for the AI workflows you need to own, audit, and extend. Not anti-SaaS — anti-lock-in.
SaaS agent platforms are useful when the work is simple, generic, and contained inside one vendor's workspace. Vocion is for AI workflows closer to the core of how your company operates — workflows that cross systems, depend on proprietary context, require judgment, and improve over time.
The problem with rented AI operations
A closed platform helps you move quickly at first. But as adoption grows, important parts of your business can get trapped inside the vendor's system: prompts, workflow logic, business rules, approval history, user feedback, output history, integration patterns, and evaluation data. That makes it harder to switch tools, change models, self-host, audit workflows, or build custom capabilities later.
Not anti-SaaS. Anti-lock-in.
Vocion can work alongside the tools your company already uses. The goal isn't to replace every SaaS app — it's to avoid making a closed SaaS agent platform the system of record for your company's AI operating knowledge.
Want the full side-by-side? The Open framework vs SaaS agent platforms page has the complete comparison — runtime control, portability, auditability, cost model, and where each one fits.