One extends your team with people you direct; the other hands a scoped result to someone else. The right answer depends on who owns the thinking.
Staff augmentation adds vetted specialists to your team — your backlog, your standups, your direction. Project outsourcing buys a result — the vendor owns delivery and you own acceptance. Augmentation preserves control and product knowledge; outsourcing transfers execution risk but also context.
| Staff augmentation | Project outsourcing | |
|---|---|---|
| Who directs the work | You | The vendor |
| Pricing | Time-based, transparent | Fixed or milestone-based |
| Knowledge stays with | Your team | The vendor (unless contracted back) |
| Speed to start | Days to weeks | Weeks to months (scoping first) |
| Fits best when | Ongoing product work, senior gaps | Bounded, well-specified deliverables |
Outcome-scoped delivery pods sit between the two: a small senior team delivers a defined result (an agent live, a workflow automated) at an agreed price — but with capability transfer built in, so the knowledge lands in your organization instead of leaving with the vendor. Buyer research shows enterprises increasingly structuring AI work exactly this way.
If the work is your product's future: augment — hire the specialist directly. If it's bounded and truly separable: outsource it. If it's new-territory AI work where you need a result and the ability to run it afterwards: pod.
No — the difference is vetting, continuity and compliance. Probegin contracts and payrolls the specialist, guarantees replacement, and keeps you clear of Dutch freelance-classification (DBA) risk that direct freelance constructions carry.
Often, by agreement — long placements naturally grow into permanent relationships, and we'd rather enable that conversation than block it with punitive clauses.
Outsourcing prices certainty (the vendor pads for risk); augmentation prices time transparently. For evolving scope, augmentation is usually cheaper per delivered outcome; for frozen scope, a fixed price can win.
Bring the role or the question — we'll tell you honestly what fits, with rates on the table.
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