Documenso Logo

Commodifying Signing

Image of Timur Ercan

Timur Ercan

Co-Founder

A lighthouse on a tiny island.

Lighthouses are often used as an example of a public good; As they benefit all maritime users, but no one can be excluded from using them as a navigational aid. Use by one person neither prevents access by other people, nor does it reduce availability to others.

Commodifying Signing

TLDR; We are creating signing as a public good and are commoditizing it to make it cheaper and better.

While we are in full-on building mode with Documenso, I think a lot about the big picture of what we are attempting to do. One phrase that keeps popping up is, "We are commodifying signing." Let's dig deeper into what that means.

Let's start with why we are doing this. Documenso's mission is to solve the domain of signing once and for all for everyone. In so many calls, I hear stories about how organizations build their own solution because the existing ones are too expensive or need to be more flexible. That means not hundreds but probably thousands of companies worldwide have done the same. This is simply wasting humanity's time. Since digital signing systems are understood well enough that seemingly "everyone" can build them, given enough pain, It's time to do it once correctly.

Is signing already a commodity?

In economics, a commodity is an economic good, usually a resource, that has explicitly full or substantial fungibility: that is, the market treats instances of the good as equivalent or nearly so with no regard to who produced them.

That sounds like the signing market today. There is no shortage of signing providers, and you can get similar signing services from many places. So why is this different from what we want, and why does this not satisfy the market?

  • Signing is expensive and painful when you are locked into your vendor, and they charge by signing volume.
  • Signing is also expensive and painful when you have to build it yourself since no vendor fits your requirements or you are not allowed to

To understand why, we need to look at the landscape as it is today:

  • Commodity: Signing SaaS
  • Private Goods: Signing Code Base, Regulatory Know-How
  • Public Goods: Web Tech, Digital Signature Algorithms and Standards

What the current players have done is to commodify the listed public goods into commercial products:

[…]the action and process of transforming goods, services, ideas, nature, personal information, people, or animals into commodities. (Let's ignore the end of that list for now and what it says about humanity, yikes)

While this paradigm brought digital signing to many businesses worldwide, we aim for a different future. To solve signing once and for all, we need to achieve two core points:

  • Making it cheaper so it's profitable for everyone to use
  • Making it more accessible so everyone can use it (e.g. regulated industries) and flexible enough (extendable, open).

To achieve this, we must transform the landscape to look like this:

  • Commodities: Enterprise Components, Support, Hosting, Self-Host Licenses
  • Public Goods: (no longer private): OS (Open Source) Signing Code Base, OS Regulatory Know-How
  • Public Goods: OS Web Tech, Digital Signature Algorithms and Standards

Raising the Bar

Before creating a commodity, we are raising the bar of what the underlying public good is. Having an open source singing framework you can extend, self-host, and understand makes the resulting solution much more accessible and extendable for everyone. Now for the final feat of making signing cheaper:

As we have seen, signing has already been commodified. But since it was done by a closed source and, frankly, a very opaque industry, no downward price spiral has ensued. By building Documenso open source with an open culture, we can pierce the veil and trigger what the space has been missing for a long time: Commoditization. If you had to read that again, so did I:

In business literature, commoditization is defined as the process by which goods that have economic value and are distinguishable in terms of attributes (uniqueness or brand) become simple commodities in the eyes of the market or consumers.

By only selling what creates value for the customer (hosting a highly available service, keeping it compliant, supporting with technical issues and challenges, preparing industry-specific components), we are commoditizing signing since everyone can do it now: The resources enabling it are public goods, aka. open source. A leveled playing field, as described above, is the perfect environment for a community-first, technology-first, and value-first company like Documenso to flourish.

Changing the Game

In this new world, a company needing signing (literally every company) can decide if the ROI (Return on Investment) of building signing themselves is greater than simply paying for the value-added activities they will need anyway. Pricing our offering not on volume but fixed is a nice additional wedge into the market we intend to use here.

The market dynamic now changes to who can offer the greatest value added to the public goods, driving the price down as this can be done much more efficiently than locking customers into closed source SaaS. Documenso, being a lean company, which we intend to stay with for a long time, will help kickstart this effect. Open Source capital efficiency is real. Our planned enterprise components, hosting support, and partner ecosystem will all leverage this effect.

We will grow our community around the public good, the open-source repo, and create an ecosystem around the commodities built on top of it (components, hosting, compliance, support). We will solve signing once and for all, and the world will be better for it. Onwards.

As always, feel free to connect on Twitter / X (DM open) or Discord if you have any questions or comments.

Best from Hamburg
Timur

  • Vision
  • Mission
  • Open Source

Back to all posts

Join the Open Signing Movement

Create your account and start using state-of-the-art document signing. Open and beautiful signing is within your grasp.

Get started

© 2024 Documenso, Inc. All rights reserved.