
You approved the rollout. Procurement signed the contract. IT packaged the installer, pushed it to devices, and the vendor marked the deployment as complete.
Six months later, finance wants to know whether the renewal makes sense. Department heads say the software is “in use”, but nobody can say by whom, how often, or whether people are using the part that justified the spend in the first place. Vendor dashboards show logins and seat counts. They rarely show whether the tool changed how work gets done.
That gap is where most software ROI arguments fall apart. Product adoption metrics fix it, if you measure the right things and ignore the vanity numbers.
For enterprise IT, adoption isn't a simple SaaS question. It's an endpoint question, a workflow question, and often a hybrid-work question. You need to know which tools are installed, which are opened, which are helping people reach value quickly, and which licences are sitting idle on machines that haven't touched the product in weeks.



