
Vibe coding is making it simpler than ever for marketers to swap out SaaS tools in favor of custom solutions they create themselves. But “simple” doesn’t automatically mean “high quality,” and the downsides are already surfacing in performance, security, and long-term upkeep. The attraction is clear. Recent benchmarks show startups can cut upfront development costs by 50% to 70% when they build with AI instead of purchasing software. Yet those savings often come with what some describe as a “quality tax.” AI-generated code produces 1.7 times more serious issues than code written by humans, and 45% of samples fail basic security checks. Chris Penn, co-founder and chief data scientist at TrustInsights.ai, says the difference largely depends on how people approach the work. “People who are software developers, who are already coders, make generally excellent vibe coders, because what the machine is doing for them is it’s doing the typing,” he said. In other words, AI accelerates execution but doesn’t eliminate the need for planning, architecture, or human oversight.
The integration challenge appears quickly. One of the earliest problems marketers encounter is getting their new tools to work with the rest of their stack. SaaS products are designed with integrations in mind, but that doesn’t come built-in when you roll your own solution. “That is a definite risk,” Penn said. “What’s the first thing an SaaS martech manager is asked about their product? ‘What do you integrate with?’” If teams don’t consider this from the start, they end up bolting on integrations later, which is more difficult and often messy. “You’re much better off building it…