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Guide

How to switch tools without breaking existing workflows

Tool migrations often fail not because the new product is weak, but because the team breaks too many working habits at once.

Why read this guide first

This page exists to establish evaluation criteria before a specific tool takes over the reader's attention.

Updated: March 25, 2026

1. Fix the migration reason in one sentence

State whether the move is really about price, speed, collaboration, or retrieval before comparing options.

Without that sentence, migration projects tend to expand midstream and lose a stable success standard.

2. Move core workflows before full archives

Do not start by migrating everything. Start with the few recurring workflows that people rely on every week.

A migration only becomes credible when the high-frequency work feels stable in the new system.

3. Leave a short overlap period

Turning off the old tool immediately removes your fallback before the team has confidence in the new one.

A brief overlap period makes it easier to spot what functionality is actually missing instead of guessing from demos.

4. Judge success by habit formation

The migration is not successful just because the files moved. It is successful when the team actually defaults to the new workflow.

If the new habit does not hold after a few months, the migration may be technically complete but operationally weak.