
Every strategy deck has a version of the same slide. A horizon line, a date a few years out, and the words “connected enterprise” sitting just past it, like a destination the business has not reached yet. Systems talking to each other in real time. Data moving cleanly between procurement, finance, and legal. Decisions made without anyone re-keying a number from one tool into another. It gets treated as something to build toward, once the budget allows and the basics are handled.
That framing has a problem. The infrastructure for a connected business has not been sitting in a lab somewhere, waiting for 2030. It has been in production, generating revenue, for years. The gap between businesses that operate as one connected system and businesses that do not has very little to do with whether the technology exists. It has to do with whether anyone decided to use it that way.
Integration Already Has a Revenue Line, Not a Roadmap Slot
APIs used to be something engineering teams built quietly in the background. That is no longer true. According to MuleSoft’s 2026 Connectivity Benchmark Report, APIs and API-related implementations now account for 40 percent of company revenue, up from 25 percent in 2018, according to the IT leaders surveyed. That is not a forecast. It is what is already happening inside their businesses.
The same shift shows up on the document and signing side of the business. Fortune Business Insights projects the global digital signature market to grow from $9.85 billion in 2025 to $104.49 billion by 2032, a 40.1 percent annual growth rate. Markets do not grow at that pace because a technology is experimental. They grow because the technology has already proven itself and adoption is accelerating past the early movers.
Put the two together and the picture is consistent. The plumbing for a connected business, the APIs, the cloud-native integration layers, the legally binding digital execution of agreements, is mature, productized, and already generating measurable returns for the companies using it well. None of this requires a five-year roadmap. It requires a decision.
The Disconnection Is a Buying Pattern, Not a Technology Gap
If the infrastructure is ready, why do most businesses still operate like a collection of departments instead of one system? The honest answer is in how the tools got bought, not in what the tools can do.
MuleSoft’s 2025 Connectivity Benchmark Report, based on interviews with over a thousand IT leaders, found that the average enterprise now runs 897 applications, and only 29 percent of them are connected to each other. Ninety percent of those IT leaders said data silos are creating real business problems. Ninety-five percent said they are struggling to integrate data across systems. Only 2 percent of organizations have managed to connect more than half their applications.
This is not a story about waiting for better tools. It is a story about how the tools arrived. Contracts were taking too long, so someone bought an e-signature platform. Approvals were dragging, so another team brought in a workflow tool. Procurement could not see vendor risk, so a third team built a spreadsheet, then bought software for that too. Each purchase solved a real, local problem. None of them were designed to talk to each other, because no one was buying for the system. They were buying for the symptom.
The result is the 897-application enterprise: technically modern, operationally fragmented, and still running on email and manual handoffs at every point where one department’s tool meets another’s.
What It Looks Like When the Layer Already Exists
Flowmono is a good example of what building for the system, instead of the symptom, actually produces. Rather than treating e-signature, workflow automation, and vendor management as three separate purchases solving three separate problems, Flowmono built E-Sign, Automate, and VPMC to operate as one connected layer, with vendor onboarding, approvals, and contract execution moving through a shared data model that also integrates with the tools businesses already run, including Google Workspace, Microsoft 365, and existing ERP systems.
What that looks like in practice: a vendor submits a bid through the procurement portal, including compliance documentation. The system checks that documentation against the organization’s requirements, identifies the right approval chain based on the value of the bid, and generates a contract from a pre-approved template. The contract routes to the correct signers with full context attached, captures a legally binding signature, and archives the executed agreement with a searchable audit trail, without anyone re-entering the same vendor data across three separate tools.
The point is not that any one of those steps is novel on its own. E-signature, workflow logic, and vendor record-keeping have all existed as standalone categories for years. The point is what happens when they share one data layer instead of three. Procurement does not lose visibility the moment a contract moves to legal. Finance does not have to ask which version of a document is current. Nothing falls into the gap between tools, because there is no gap.
That same logic shows up in how the platform is sold, not just how it is built. Flowmono eventually moved its own customers off three separate subscriptions and into a single bundled platform, with signing, automation, and vendor management billed and operated as one product instead of three.
This is not a pilot program or a future-state mockup. Flowmono was built in Lagos, grew 400 percent without external venture funding, and now serves enterprises across banking and oil and gas, winning customers like Stanbic IBTC along the way, according to TechCabal’s reporting on the company. The infrastructure for a connected business is not waiting to be invented somewhere. It is already running vendor onboarding, contract execution, and compliance workflows for real organizations, today.
The Deadline Already Passed
Pushing “connected business” out to 2030 is a comfortable way to avoid a harder, more immediate question: whether to keep buying single-purpose tools that solve this quarter’s bottleneck, or to invest now in a layer that connects what the business already owns.
The companies that look connected five years from now will not be the ones who waited for the infrastructure to arrive. They will be the ones who stopped treating connection as a future milestone and started treating it as a purchasing decision they could make this year. If your stack still solves problems one department at a time, book a demo with Flowmono to see what it looks like when procurement, contracts, and approvals run on one shared layer instead of three.
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