# "Our Compliance Platform Wanted $12K/year and Assumed We Had a Security Team": A Six-Person Startup's Alternative | Attri Edge

Home Articles "Our Compliance Platform Wanted $12K/year and Assumed We Had a Security Team": A Six-Person Startup's Alternative Rescue "Our Compliance Platform Wanted $12K/year and Assumed We Had a Security Team": A Six-Person Startup's Alternative Vanta, Drata and Sprinto are priced for companies with dedicated security teams. For 5–15 person startups, the platform sometimes costs more than it saves. Here's the alternative architecture that works. By Hemant Attri , Founder, Attri Edge · June 3, 2026 · Updated June 3, 2026 · 5 min read A founder told me last month: “Vanta wanted $12,000/year and their onboarding assumed we had a dedicated security team. We’re six people. I founded the company. The platform’s getting-started guide had us assigning a ‘Security Officer’ role. We don’t have a Security Officer. We have me, three engineers, a salesperson and a designer.” This is a real pattern. Vanta, Drata, Sprinto, Secureframe, Scrut, these platforms are priced and structured for the median customer, which is a company with 30–200 employees and at least one person with security ownership. For a six-person startup, the platform’s assumptions don’t match the reality. The honest answer for many early-stage teams is: defer the platform. Build a leaner compliance foundation. Add the platform when your enterprise sales motion actually requires it. The honest test: do you need SOC 2 right now? The first question isn’t which platform. It’s whether you need SOC 2 at all right now. You need SOC 2 if: 2+ enterprise deals in your last 6 months have stalled or died over the requirement Your sales motion is explicitly enterprise (deal size $40K+ ARR, multi-stakeholder buying, formal procurement) A specific named buyer in your pipeline requires it as a condition of contract You don’t need SOC 2 right now if: Your customers are SMBs or mid-market without procurement processes Deals are closing without security review You’re pre-revenue or sub-$500K ARR If you don’t need SOC 2 right now, you don’t need the platform right now. Defer both. Focus on building product, finding customers, building revenue. Add SOC 2 (and the platform) when the business case is unambiguous. A surprising number of 5–15 person teams buy Vanta because they “should” rather than because they need to. This is wasteful. If you do need SOC 2: the minimum toolkit Assume you’ve concluded you do need SOC 2 in the next 6–12 months. You’re committed to an audit. The platform now starts to make sense, but you don’t need everything immediately. The minimum baseline (deploy at 0–6 people): Identity provider with MFA. Google Workspace ($6/user/month) or Microsoft 365 ($6/user/month) is enough at this scale. Don’t over-buy Okta. Code repository with branch protection and review requirements. GitHub or GitLab. Cloud account with structured IAM (no root account daily use, principle of least privilege, MFA on all accounts). Free with AWS/GCP/Azure. Vulnerability scanning. Snyk free tier or GitHub Dependabot. AWS Inspector for cloud infrastructure. Centralized logging. CloudWatch or Datadog at small scale. Free or near-free at low volume. Endpoint security on company-issued laptops. macOS built-in or Microsoft Defender included with M365. Background check vendor for new hires. Checkr (US), AuthBridge (India). Documented security policies. Free templates from SANS, Vanta’s public templates or compiled from open-source compliance projects. Incident response runbook (one page is fine at this scale). Total monthly cost: $200–$800 depending on team size. Sufficient to demonstrate baseline security to most buyers. Adding the platform: when and how The trigger to add Vanta, Drata, Sprinto or equivalent: you’ve signed with an auditor for SOC 2 engagement, kickoff is scheduled within 90 days and you have at least one person who can own the platform internally (founder, CTO, ops lead, doesn’t need to be a security specialist, but needs ownership). Before that trigger, the platform’s value is muted because you can’t operationalize it. When you do add the platform: Onboard incrementally. Don’t try to hit 100% in the first week. Connect critical integrations first: identity provider, cloud accounts, code repos. Get the basic dashboard populated. Run for two weeks. Then add personnel tracking, vendor management, training. Don’t trust the dashboard yet. A 60% dashboard score in week 2 doesn’t mean you’re 60% audit-ready. It means 60% of the platform’s automated tests are passing. Real audit-readiness is different. See The Compliance Automation Gap . Plan for the operating layer. The platform doesn’t run itself. Plan for 0.2–0.5 FTE of someone’s time to manage it ongoing. If that someone is the founder, be realistic about the time commitment. The alternative architectures For small teams that need SOC 2 but want to minimize platform costs, three viable alternatives: Alternative 1: Defer the platform until audit kickoff Run on the minimum toolkit through pre-audit work. Add the platform 30–60 days before audit fieldwork. Use it primarily for the audit period. Cost: save $9K–$15K in the deferral period; commit when value is highest. Best fit: Teams with strong technical operators who can manage manual evidence collection in the pre-audit period. Alternative 2: Lighter-weight platforms Sprinto has historically been positioned for smaller teams; pricing can be more flexible. Scrut similar. Some niche tools (Comply, OneTrust Compliance Automation at certain tiers) offer different economics. Best fit: Teams that want platform automation but at lower price points than the Vanta/Drata category. Alternative 3: Fractional compliance support without a platform Engage a fractional compliance specialist who brings their own toolkit (often built on spreadsheets, Notion, basic automation). They handle the work; you avoid the platform license. Cost: $30K–$80K/year for fractional engagement, vs $9K–$15K platform + 0.3 FTE internal time. Best fit: Teams without internal capacity to operate the platform, willing to pay for human work instead of automation. What I’d tell that founder If you’re six people and the platform is making you feel inadequate: you’re probably not the right customer for the platform yet. That’s not a flaw in your team or business; it’s a recognition that the platform was built for companies further along. Build the minimum toolkit. Focus on product and customers. When you have 2+ enterprise deals stalling on SOC 2 and committed pipeline justifying the investment, then add the platform. Until then, don’t pay $12K to feel like a “real” company. Where Attri Edge fits The Foundational Retainer ($3,500/month) is designed for exactly this situation, pre-SOC 2 startups committing to an enterprise sales motion who need compliance ops support without adding headcount or committing to a platform yet. We handle the minimum toolkit setup, policy creation, vendor management and questionnaire response. When you’re ready to commit to audit, we onboard the platform with you. Book the diagnostic → Related reading: The Compliance Automation Gap , what platforms don’t solve regardless of team size The Stalled Enterprise Deal Playbook , when SOC 2 becomes urgent The Complete Guide to SOC 2 for US SaaS With India Teams Frequently asked questions Are Vanta/Drata/Sprinto worth it for 5–15 person startups? It depends on your enterprise sales motion. If you have active enterprise pipeline requiring SOC 2 in 6–12 months, yes, the platform pays back via deal acceleration. If your sales motion is mid-market or SMB and SOC 2 isn't blocking deals, no, the platform's value is much lower at this stage. Many 5–15 person teams should defer the platform until enterprise sales motion warrants it. What's the minimum compliance toolkit for an early-stage startup? Identity provider with MFA (Google Workspace or Okta starter), basic logging (CloudWatch, Datadog, or similar), vulnerability scanning (Snyk, Dependabot, AWS Inspector), a background check vendor, signed security policies (free templates) and a basic incident response runbook. Total cost: $200–$800/month at small scale, sufficient to demonstrate baseline security to all but the most demanding enterprise buyers. Can I delay SOC 2 until later-stage? Yes, if your customers don't require it. Many B2B SaaS companies operate successfully without SOC 2 through Series A. The trigger to commit is when 2+ enterprise deals stall on the requirement. Premature SOC 2 (before you have revenue justifying $80K+ investment) is more common than people admit and usually wasteful. What's the right time to buy Vanta/Drata/Sprinto? When you've committed to a SOC 2 engagement (signed with an auditor, kickoff scheduled). The platform's value is concentrated in audit prep and execution. Before that, you're paying for capabilities you can't use effectively. Don't buy 6 months before you commit to the audit. Can I get SOC 2 without a compliance platform? Yes, with more manual effort. The platform automates evidence collection, policy management and continuous monitoring. Without it, you do these manually with spreadsheets, shared docs and scheduled tasks, roughly 2–3x more time, saving $9K–$15K/year. For 5–15 person startups with deeply technical teams, this can be the right trade. For most growing companies, the platform is worth it once you commit to audit. Is the alternative really cheaper, or just deferred cost? For pre-enterprise startups: actually cheaper, you're avoiding $9K–$15K/year for capabilities you can't fully use. For enterprise-ready startups: deferred cost, you'll eventually need the platform; deferring just pushes the buy to when it pays back faster. Be honest about which category you're in. Talk to the operator This article is one slice of the work Attri Edge does for US SaaS companies with India GCCs. If your situation needs the full operational layer, start with a 90-minute diagnostic. Book your $999 diagnostic
