How to Create an Internal SaaS Approval Workflow That Actually Works

As your organization grows, so does the number of software tools your teams want to use. Without a clear request and approval workflow, you risk tool sprawl, duplicate purchases, security vulnerabilities, and Shadow IT.

This guide shows how to build a lightweight but effective SaaS intake and approval process, designed for real-world teams that need flexibility, visibility, and control.


Why You Need a SaaS Approval Workflow

Whether you’re a startup or a maturing IT team, having an internal SaaS request process helps:

  • Prevent unauthorized purchases
  • Improve security and compliance review
  • Avoid redundant tools and wasted spend
  • Ensure accountability and documentation
  • Encourage collaboration between IT, finance, and operations

If you’ve read How to Discover and Mitigate Shadow IT in Your SaaS Stack, you already know: shadow IT often begins when employees feel forced to find their own tools. A transparent approval process is a better alternative.


Step 1: Design Your Intake Form

Create a simple request form that employees can fill out when they want to bring in a new tool. It can live in Asana, Google Forms, Typeform, or any internal portal.

Key fields to include:

  • Name of tool and vendor
  • Team/department requesting it
  • Problem it solves or goal it supports
  • Free vs paid plan
  • Estimated user count and cost
  • Data type involved (PII, financial, internal comms, etc.)
  • Alternatives considered
  • Requestor name and manager approval

Bonus: Include a “Do you think we already have a tool that does this?” checkbox to prompt internal discovery.


Step 2: Define Approval Roles

You don’t need a huge committee, but you do need clarity. Define who reviews and approves requests based on these categories:

  • IT / Security – for access control, SSO, encryption, and security concerns
  • Finance / Ops – for budget alignment and vendor contract tracking
  • Team Lead / Manager – to confirm the business case
  • Tool Owner (optional) – for long-term support and documentation

For example, requests under $500/year might only need a team lead + IT. Enterprise-grade or sensitive tools should go through all stages.


Step 3: Evaluate and Prioritize Requests

Once submitted, evaluate:

  • Is the tool redundant with anything we already use?
  • Does it meet our security baseline (e.g., MFA, SOC 2, SSO)?
  • Is the pricing sustainable if scaled across teams?
  • Does it support integrations with our existing stack?
  • Will it require significant training, onboarding, or support?

This evaluation links naturally to your other policies:


Step 4: Document and Track Approvals

Once approved:

  • Add the tool to your SaaS inventory or asset list
  • Record the request, approver(s), contract owner, and renewal date
  • Schedule a 60- or 90-day review to assess usage and adoption
  • Notify the requester of final decision and next steps

For this, tools like Notion, Airtable, or Asana work well.


Step 5: Maintain a Catalog of Approved Tools

Publish an internal page or document listing:

  • Approved tools and their primary use case
  • Department or team that owns it
  • Who to contact for help or training
  • Status (Active, Deprecated, In Trial)
  • Link to documentation or onboarding materials

This reduces friction, promotes transparency, and helps prevent redundant requests.


Step 6: Review & Improve the Workflow Quarterly

Your needs will change. Review your approval process quarterly or during regular SaaS governance meetings to evaluate:

  • Any bottlenecks in the workflow
  • How many tools were approved vs. declined
  • Time-to-decision stats
  • Tool usage after 90 days
  • Missed opportunities or duplicate purchases

You can use this data to optimize cost, improve user satisfaction, and enhance compliance.


Closing the Loop

With a well-defined SaaS approval workflow, you can:

  • Reduce Shadow IT and unauthorized tools
  • Protect sensitive data from risky vendors
  • Cut unnecessary spending
  • Create a better employee experience through faster approvals
  • Strengthen your SaaS Governance Framework across departments

This is the policy structure that makes the rest of your SaaS strategy work.

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