Data Layer vs. building your own data lake (2026)
An honest comparison of building your own data lake versus using Data Layer: cost, time, risk and outcome for leadership. Data Layer comes out on top.
Read articleA comparison between building your own cloud data infrastructure and a managed service: cost, time, expertise and maintenance.

Renting a cloud and "building our data platform" sounds like control and modernity. But the cloud is only the starting point: on its own it does not integrate, clean or govern the data. It is worth comparing that option with a complete managed service.
Own cloud means renting infrastructure (storage, compute) and building and operating the data platform on top of it. A managed data service delivers results on already-operated infrastructure, with the team included.
| Criterion | Own cloud | Managed data |
|---|---|---|
| What you get | Infrastructure | Data results |
| Integration & quality | ✗ You build it | ✓ Included |
| Team | ✗ You hire it | ✓ Included |
| Time to result | ✗ Months | ✓ Weeks |
| Governance & GDPR | You implement it | ✓ By design |
| Cost | Infrastructure + team | ✓ Consumption, all in |
Renting cloud solves the "where", but leaves the "how" unsolved: integrating sources, building pipelines, ensuring quality, applying governance and maintaining it all. That work — and its cost in people and time — is what many companies underestimate when choosing the cloud on their own.
The cloud solves where the data lives, not how it becomes a reliable result.
Managing your own cloud makes sense if you already have a consolidated data team and want total control. To obtain business results without taking on that operation, a managed service — combining European infrastructure, an expert team and pay-per-use — delivers more value, sooner and with less risk.
An own cloud gives you raw infrastructure but leaves integration, quality, governance and maintenance — and their cost in people and time — on your side. A managed service delivers data results on European infrastructure with the team included and pay-per-use. The cloud is the start; the result is what matters.
The cloud solves the "where", but not integration, quality, governance or maintenance. That work, in people and time, is what is usually underestimated.
When you already have a consolidated data team and want full control over every component.
Data results without operating the infrastructure: integration, quality, team, governance and maintenance included, with pay-per-use.
Rarely once you add the team and time to build and maintain the platform. A managed service converts that into a predictable consumption-based cost.
Yes. You keep ownership and governance of the data; you outsource only the operation of the infrastructure.
An own cloud takes months to deliver a working solution; a managed service typically delivers a first result in weeks.
Tell us what you want to achieve. Data Layer connects, processes and delivers the result up and running, with no infrastructure for you to manage.