Provides shared standards. Fabric gives the other systems one shared language instead of many local exceptions.
Connects systems through shared interfaces. The products attach to the same system logic instead of merely existing side by side.
Synchronizes state across tools. Important state changes do not stay trapped locally, but become usable across the wider system.
Enables event-based collaboration. Changes and reactions can move together across several systems instead of staying isolated.
Provides one central truth layer. Not every system has to build its own small truth when a shared reference exists.
Makes extension easy and controlled. New pieces can connect without the whole system being reinvented every time.
Lets new systems join seamlessly. Growth stays possible because connection and placement are already prepared.