*Written by Marc Boudria, Chief Innovation Officer at BetterEngineer
It’s startling how many organizations, even some of the world’s most recognized brands, continue to operate as if it were still 1997. The systems they rely on, the way they think about technology, and the cultural blockers embedded deep within their walls all point to one dangerous truth: legacy thinking is alive and well.
It shows up everywhere:
This mindset is more than just old-fashioned. It’s actively harmful. Legacy thinking is a pox on innovation. It’s the root cause of the fragmented, siloed, and poorly integrated tech stacks we see everywhere today. It’s why your data can’t flow freely across teams. It’s why simple tasks take twice as long. It’s why your best people quietly dread Mondays.
Let’s be clear: it’s not legacy technology that’s the core problem. Plenty of older systems work just fine when properly maintained and integrated into a modern architecture. The real threat is legacy thinking, a mindset that:
This thinking shows up in questions like:
The consequences of this approach are massive yet hidden. A recent survey by Salesforce found that 81% of IT leaders say disconnected systems create silos that slow down digital initiatives. Gartner also predicts that through 2027, 75% of organizations will have attempted to modernize legacy applications, yet half will fail because they treat modernization purely as a technical exercise, ignoring cultural and process shifts.
In short, your technology is only as modern as your mindset. If leadership and culture stay stuck in the past, so will your systems, no matter how many cloud migrations or AI pilots you run.
Legacy thinking doesn’t just impact your systems. It crushes your people.
And ironically, the very ROI questions that leadership uses to stall improvement become self-defeating. A study by Forrester found that improving employee experience can drive up to a 20% increase in productivity and a 30% increase in retention. Better internal systems pay for themselves many times over, if only leaders could break free from legacy thinking long enough to see it.
Overcoming legacy thinking is not about ripping everything out and starting from scratch. It’s about shifting perspective and creating space for thoughtful, incremental change. Here’s how to begin:
Stop letting past investments dictate your future. That $3 million you spent five years ago on a now-awkward custom tool? That’s gone. Holding onto it just because it was expensive compounds the loss. Instead, calculate the opportunity cost of not fixing it.
Every outdated workflow or clunky tool is a daily tax on your people. Start treating internal systems like customer-facing products — worthy of real design, iteration, and delight. Ask your employees what slows them down and frustrates them. Then actually act on it.
Big-bang transformations often fail. Instead, choose a specific area to modernize with clear outcomes. Run short experiments (like 30-day sprints) that demonstrate value. Use these wins to build momentum and internal champions.
Stop reinventing wheels internally when robust platforms, integrations, and APIs exist. Embrace openness and interoperability. Favor platforms that evolve and scale with you over brittle, custom-built monoliths.
Tie modernization goals to personal and departmental incentives. If your leaders get bonuses for “cost-cutting,” they’ll keep deferring upgrades. If they’re rewarded for employee productivity or customer satisfaction, behavior shifts.
Create a culture where it’s normal to test new tools, attend conferences, run hackathons, and question old assumptions. When your workforce is constantly learning, legacy thinking has less space to fester.
Answer yes or no to these:
You’re likely running on legacy thinking and paying for it every day in hidden costs, lost productivity, and frustrated talent.
The world has moved on. If your organization is still asking 1997 questions, you’ll keep getting 1997 outcomes. Meanwhile, competitors with modern mindsets will be deploying AI responsibly, automating the right processes, and empowering their employees to do meaningful work.
The truth? Legacy thinking is often the only real moat protecting your competitors, because it’s holding you back.
At BetterEngineer, we specialize in helping organizations shed legacy thinking, not by just throwing new tech at problems, but by aligning your people, processes, and technology around a modern vision. Whether it’s through AI discovery sprints, design system evolution, or building autonomous senior teams, we’ll help you move from outdated mindsets to future-ready execution.
Let’s have a frank conversation about where legacy thinking might be limiting you. (No sales pressure, just truth-telling.)