Not Invented Here Syndrome

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What Does Not Invented Here Syndrome Mean?

Not invented here syndrome (NIHS) is a mindset or corporate culture that favors internally-developed products over externally-developed products, even when the external solution is superior.

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NIHS is frequently used in the context of software development, where a programmer will overlook all the attributes of an existing solution simply because it wasn’t produced in-house.

Techopedia Explains Not Invented Here Syndrome

It’s a common belief in Silicon Valley, and the tech world in general, that companies should "eat their own dog food", which is just a way of saying that a company should use its own products. While this makes sense at some level — you shouldn’t sell something to customers that is unfit for your own use — the concept of NIHS is similar but takes the line of thinking to the extreme. In this sense, the term is generally used negatively and would refer to somebody whose decision-making skills are put into question because of this bias.

Explanations (and the emotions) for NHIS include:

  • Not valuing the work of others (pride, in a negative connotation)
  • Fear from not understanding the work of others (lack i confidence)
  • Avoiding, or unwillingness to participate in, a "turf war" (cowardness or avoiding conflict)
  • Fear of a competitor’s strategies, e.g. aggressive action in attempting to buy out a supplier thereby creating a captive market (fear of competition)
  • Fear of future supply issues (fear of uncertainty)
  • Being convinced that there will be benefits to "reinventing the wheel", because of securing a more controlled market share (greediness)
  • Jealousy that existing products, knowledge, research or service were not created first (jealousy)
  • The belief that internally developed solutions would be superior (pride, in a positive connotation)
  • Rejection of the belief that "The customer comes first." (selfishness)

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Margaret Rouse
Technology Expert
Margaret Rouse
Technology Expert

Margaret é uma premiada redatora e professora conhecida por sua habilidade de explicar assuntos técnicos complexos para um público empresarial não técnico. Nos últimos vinte anos, suas definições de TI foram publicadas pela Que em uma enciclopédia de termos tecnológicos e citadas em artigos do New York Times, Time Magazine, USA Today, ZDNet, PC Magazine e Discovery Magazine. Ela ingressou na Techopedia em 2011. A ideia de Margaret de um dia divertido é ajudar os profissionais de TI e de negócios a aprenderem a falar os idiomas altamente especializados uns dos outros.