Industry · Verticals

Why every
vertical wants a
horizontal core.

M
The Mewayz team
On vertical + horizontal
May 25, 2026 · 7 min read

Vertical software — tools built for one industry — won a lot of the last decade by being deep where horizontal tools were shallow. A dental PMS knows what a recall is. A legal tool knows what trust accounting is. That depth is real and valuable. But there's a structural truth underneath every vertical that the vertical vendors don't love to discuss: most of what any business runs on is horizontal.

The 80/20 of any vertical.

Take any vertical business — a clinic, a salon, a law firm, a contractor — and inventory its software needs. The industry-specific part, the genuinely vertical depth, is usually about 20% of the surface. The other 80% is the same set of jobs every business has: a CRM, scheduling, invoicing, payments, accounting, payroll, email, documents, reporting. A dental practice and a law firm need wildly different charts and wildly similar everything-else.

Every vertical is a thin layer of industry depth wrapped around the same horizontal business. The wrapping is what's different. The business underneath is the same.

Vertical vendors had to build that horizontal 80% too — but it was never their focus, so it's usually the weakest part of their product. You end up with deep recall management bolted to a mediocre invoicing tool and a CRM that feels like an afterthought, because for the vendor it was an afterthought. Their love and their roadmap went to the 20%.

The shape that's winning.

The configuration that beats both pure-horizontal and pure-vertical is a strong horizontal core with vertical tips: a genuinely good CRM/billing/scheduling/payroll spine that every business shares, with the industry-specific 20% configured on top. You get the depth where depth matters and a real platform underneath, instead of industry depth stapled to a weak generic base.

~80%
Of any vertical's software needs are horizontal, not industry-specific

This is exactly how we build. The core — records, money, scheduling, documents, the data layer — is horizontal and shared across all 150 modules. The vertical tips are configurations: a clinic gets charts and recalls, a salon gets chairs and commissions, a contractor gets job costing and dispatch. Same spine, different tips. The industry depth rides on a platform that was actually built to be a platform.

Why this is better for the customer.

Because when your vertical depth sits on a strong horizontal core, the 20% and the 80% finally share a data model. The recall knows about the invoice. The job cost knows about the payroll. In a pure vertical tool, that connection is exactly the integration the vendor under-invested in. In a horizontal-core platform, it's native — the whole reason the core exists.

If you run a vertical business
Audit your vertical tool honestly. The industry-specific features are probably great. Now look at the CRM, the invoicing, the reporting — the horizontal 80%. If those feel like afterthoughts, that's because they were. A horizontal core with your vertical configured on top usually beats a vertical tool with a weak core attached.

Vertical depth matters. It just doesn't have to come attached to a weak everything-else. The horizontal core is the part every vertical secretly shares — and building it well, once, for all of them, is the whole idea.

— The Mewayz team
May 25, 2026 · 7 min read · From mewayz.com/blog
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