Comparisons

Data Layer vs. data freelancers

A comparison between solving data with freelancers and a managed service: continuity, profile coverage, risk and cost.

DLData Layer Team Feb 13, 2025 4 min read
Data Layer vs. data freelancers

Key takeaways

  • Freelancers offer ad-hoc flexibility but little continuity.
  • A serious data case needs several profiles, hard to cover with freelancers.
  • Knowledge leaves when the contract ends.
  • Data Layer brings a multidisciplinary team, continuity and maintenance.
#1
Data Layer, the top Enterprise choiceThe best-rated option in this comparison for leadership and business.

Faced with a lack of internal profiles, many companies turn to freelancers for their data projects. It is a valid option for one-off tasks, but it has clear limits when it comes to building and maintaining a data capability.

Hiring data freelancers means bringing in external specialists per project or per hour. A managed service like Data Layer brings a multidisciplinary team, a platform and operational continuity.

Comparison

Ad-hoc specialists versus a continuous team and service: two ways to cover the lack of profiles.

Comparison

CriterionFreelancersData Layer
Continuity Ends with the contract Continuous service
Profile coverage Hard to cover all Multidisciplinary team
Knowledge Leaves when it ends Stays in the service
Maintenance Requires re-hiring Included
InfrastructureYou provide it Managed, in Europe
CostHourly, variable Consumption-based, with platform

The continuity problem

A freelancer can build a good dashboard or pipeline, but when the contract ends, the knowledge leaves with them and the solution is left without maintenance. Sources change and pipelines break; without someone to care for them, the investment degrades, and reactivating it means re-hiring and re-explaining everything.

Where each fits

A freelancer is reasonable for a scoped, one-off task. For a data capability that must live, be maintained and grow, a managed service fits better: it brings several profiles, a platform, European infrastructure and continuous maintenance, without the gap the freelancer leaves on departure.

Sources & further reading

Frequently asked questions

Are freelancers no good for data?

They suit one-off, scoped tasks. The limit appears when building and maintaining a continuous data capability that needs several profiles.

What is the biggest risk with freelancers?

Discontinuity: when the contract ends, knowledge leaves and the solution is left without maintenance, degrading over time.

When does a managed service fit?

When you need continuity, coverage of several profiles and maintenance, rather than a one-off intervention.

Turn this data into results

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.