
Why You Can't Do Without Middleware Beyond a Certain Point
TL;DR: „Native SaaS integrations hit their limits. Beyond a certain point, middleware isn't nice-to-have – it's an operational necessity for closing feature gaps, full automation, system synchronization and real scaling."
— Till FreitagThe Promise: "Integrates With Everything"
Every SaaS solution advertises hundreds of integrations. monday.com, HubSpot, Salesforce – they all have marketplaces full of connectors. And for starters, these native integrations are perfectly fine:
- Connect CRM with email ✅
- Slack notifications on status changes ✅
- Sync Google Calendar with tasks ✅
But at some point you realize: Native integrations cover 80% – but the last 20% are the ones that matter.
The Four Pain Points That Make Middleware Essential
1. Closing Feature Gaps
No SaaS tool can do everything. And that's a good thing – specialization is strength. But what happens when your CRM can't generate invoices? When your project management tool has no time tracking? When your helpdesk doesn't know project costs?
Native integrations usually sync only a fraction of fields. They're pre-built, inflexible and often read-only.
Middleware can:
- Transform, enrich and filter data before passing it on
- Map fields that aren't available in the native integration
- Handle multi-step logic: "If deal value > 10k AND industry = Construction → create project in Board X with Template Y"
Example: monday.com + Die Agenturverwaltung (DAV). Native integration? Doesn't exist. Via make.com? Projects, time entries, budgets and invoice status flow bidirectionally – in real time.
2. Fully Automating Processes
There's a fundamental difference between partial automation and full automation:
| Partial Automation | Full Automation | |
|---|---|---|
| Trigger | Manual trigger | Event-based |
| Error handling | None | Retry, fallback, alerting |
| Data validation | None | Before every step |
| Logging | Non-existent | Complete history |
| Edge cases | Ignored | Caught |
Native integrations deliver partial automation. They work as long as everything goes according to plan. But what happens with:
- An API timeout?
- Duplicates in the database?
- A missing required field?
- A weekend when nobody checks the error log?
Middleware gives you the tools for production-ready automation: error handling, retry logic, conditional branching, data aggregation and complete execution logs.
3. Integrating and Synchronizing Systems
The average mid-sized company uses 12-15 SaaS tools. In agencies and tech companies, it's often 25+. The question isn't whether these systems need to talk to each other – but how well.
The synchronization problem:
System A changes customer data
→ Native integration pushes to System B
→ System B has its own validation
→ Field gets rejected
→ System A knows nothing about it
→ Data diverges
→ 3 weeks later: "Why is the address wrong?"With middleware:
System A changes customer data
→ Middleware validates data
→ Transformation to System B's schema
→ Push to System B
→ Confirmation received
→ On error: Retry + alert to ops channel
→ Audit log: who, what, when, whereMiddleware becomes the single point of truth for data flows. You always know which data went where – and you can prove it.
4. Tuning SaaS Performance
This is where it gets really interesting. Middleware isn't just glue between tools – it's a performance multiplier:
Batch processing instead of individual requests: Instead of 500 individual API calls, middleware makes bundled requests – faster, cheaper, API rate-limit friendly.
Caching & deduplication: Middleware can cache intermediate results. When 10 scenarios need the same customer data, the API is queried only once.
Intelligent scheduling: Heavy calculations and bulk syncs run at night. Time-critical triggers fire immediately. Middleware orchestrates what runs when.
Monitoring & alerting: You don't just see whether an integration is running – you see execution times, data volumes, error rates. That's SaaS ops at enterprise level.
The Tipping Point: When Does Middleware Become Essential?
If you recognize yourself in at least three of these situations, the time has come:
- You regularly copy data manually between tools
- Native integrations don't sync all the fields you need
- You have "data zombies" – records that are current in one system but not another
- Your team has built workarounds that only one person understands
- You want to scale, but your processes don't scale with you
- Error handling consists of "hoping nothing goes wrong"
- You need audit trails for compliance or quality management
The Tool Stack: What's the Right Middleware?
For SMBs & Agencies
| make.com | n8n | Zapier | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Strength | Visual builder, 1,500+ apps | Self-hosted, unlimited | Simplicity, largest app ecosystem |
| Ideal for | Teams wanting power + UX | Techies with privacy requirements | Beginners, simple workflows |
| Pricing | Ops-based, fair | Free (self-hosted) or Cloud | Expensive at volume |
| Error handling | ✅ Excellent | ✅ Very good | ⚠️ Basic |
| Branching | ✅ Multi-branch native | ✅ Yes | ⚠️ Paths (limited) |
| HTTP/API | ✅ Flexible | ✅ Very flexible | ⚠️ Possible but cumbersome |
| GDPR | ✅ EU hosting | ✅ Self-hosted possible | ⚠️ US-based |
Our recommendation: For most SMBs and agencies, make.com is the sweet spot – powerful enough for complex scenarios, visual enough for the team, fair in pricing. Zapier works for a quick start but hits its limits fast with more complex requirements – especially around error handling, branching and GDPR. We don't use it for client projects.
For Enterprise & Corporations
When you have 500+ employees, strict compliance requirements or an existing Microsoft ecosystem, two more platforms play in their own league:
| Power Automate | Workato | |
|---|---|---|
| Strength | Seamless M365 integration, AI Builder | Enterprise iPaaS, strongest recipe system |
| Ideal for | Microsoft-centric organizations | Enterprises with complex multi-system landscapes |
| Pricing | From ~€15/user/month (partially included in M365) | Enterprise pricing (on request, from ~€10k/year) |
| Error handling | ✅ Good (Run History, Alerts) | ✅ Excellent (enterprise-grade) |
| AI features | ✅ AI Builder, Copilot integration | ✅ AI Copilot, recipe generation |
| Governance | ✅ DLP policies, environments, CoE Toolkit | ✅ Role-based access, audit logs, SOC 2 |
| Connectors | ✅ 1,000+ (strong in Microsoft ecosystem) | ✅ 1,200+ (strong with enterprise apps: SAP, Workday, NetSuite) |
| GDPR | ✅ EU data centers | ✅ EU hosting available |
Power Automate shines when your client already lives in the Microsoft world. SharePoint, Teams, Dynamics 365, Azure – everything speaks natively. The entry is often free because Power Automate is already included in many M365 licenses. The limitation: outside the Microsoft ecosystem, it gets cumbersome fast.
Workato is the Rolls-Royce of iPaaS platforms. Gartner Magic Quadrant Leader, built for enterprises that need to connect SAP with Salesforce with NetSuite with Workday – while keeping every data flow auditable. The pricing is enterprise – but so is the platform.
Rule of thumb: make.com for 90% of cases. Power Automate when Microsoft dominates. Workato when enterprise compliance and Fortune 500-level complexity are required.
The Architecture Principle: Best-of-Breed Over All-in-One
Middleware enables a fundamental architecture decision: Choose the best tool for every job – and let middleware handle the rest.
┌──────────────┐ ┌──────────────┐ ┌──────────────┐
│ monday.com │ │ DATEV / │ │ Slack / │
│ (Projects) │ │ MOCO │ │ Teams │
└──────┬───────┘ └──────┬───────┘ └──────┬───────┘
│ │ │
└────────────┬───────┘────────────────────┘
│
┌───────▼───────┐
│ make.com │
│ (Middleware) │
└───────┬───────┘
│
┌────────────┼────────────────────┐
│ │ │
┌──────▼───────┐ ┌──▼───────────┐ ┌─────▼────────┐
│ CRM │ │ Helpdesk │ │ Accounting │
│ (monday) │ │ (monday) │ │ (DATEV) │
└──────────────┘ └──────────────┘ └──────────────┘No tool needs to do everything. Every tool just needs to play to its strength.
This isn't a theoretical concept – it's the reality we implement daily with our clients. Whether a 5-person agency or a 200-employee mid-sized company: beyond a certain point, middleware is no longer optional.
Conclusion: Middleware Is Infrastructure, Not a Feature
Middleware is like electricity in a building. At first, you don't notice you need it. But beyond a certain point, nothing works without it.
Anyone who wants to seriously tune SaaS performance needs:
- A clear data architecture – what flows where?
- A capable middleware – make.com, n8n or comparable
- A team that understands automation as a competency – not a side project
The question isn't if, but when. And usually the answer is: now.
Want to take your SaaS stack to the next level with middleware? Talk to us – we'll analyze your system landscape and build the bridges your business needs.




