Tech
What real product integration should actually do for apps
Everyone suddenly wants “smart integration”. Founders, corporates, investors.
Most of the time, they cannot actually say what that means for their product.
From our side of the table as app developers, here is the short, honest version.
What people usually mean by “smart integration”
When a client says they want something advanced, it is almost always one of these:
- A chat layer over a knowledge base
- An in-app helper or “coach”
- A generic assistant that sits somewhere in the UI
Basically:
“Can we add something here so it looks more modern?”
Sometimes that is fine, but it should be thought of.
Real value vs. features as stickers
For us, a feature has real product value only if:
- You could not reasonably ship the outcome without it
- It saves serious time or money
- It unlocks something that was not economically possible before
Good examples:
- Turning raw data into usable reports automatically
- Classifying tickets, claims or content and routing them correctly
- Image and document recognition at scale
If your “smart platform” is just a wrapper around something external, you are one update away from being replaced.
Wrong use cases you should skip
Patterns that almost never age well:
- Chat layers for tiny FAQ sites where search is enough
- Complicated matchmaking where a simple algorithm would work
- Wrappers around features large platforms already offer
- Bots that block users from ever reaching a human
If you are building a “smart product” that could be solved by good UX and a bit of logic, you are not innovating — just slowing the user down.
What actually makes sense in apps today
Things we like shipping:
Process automation
Detecting defects from photos, sorting complaints, and auto-escalating edge cases.
Support that actually does stuff
Resetting passwords, checking orders, triggering refunds directly in your systems.
Recognition
Reading invoices, contracts, forms. Checking if a product is broken from an image.
Decent personalisation
Not generic content — smarter ranking and recommendations.
This is where mobile app development services get interesting: the heavy lifting happens under the hood, not by shouting features at the user.
When it’s not “just an API call”
It gets hard and expensive when:
- You need very specific behaviour
- You require tuning based on private data
- You must stay strict with GDPR and internal rules
- You need deep integration into messy legacy systems
Most of the work is not in the feature itself — it is in data, UX, infra and change management.
Three questions we ask before building any feature
- What exact problem are we solving right now, in real life?
- What data do we actually have to support this?
- Who will use it daily and what does “success” look like for them?
If this is not clear, we do discovery first or say no.
FAQ
Do I really need this in my app?
Maybe, maybe not. If it does not move a real metric, you probably do not.
Is this type of integration only for big companies?
No. But small teams need to be extra picky. One strong use case beats five shallow ones.
Will it replace my team?
It replaces tasks, not people who think. If leadership outsources thinking, that is a management problem.How do you fit into this as a partner?
We act as a mobile app agency that actually ships. If you want app developers who push back on unnecessary features — not just nod and bill you — that’s where we’re comfortable.
