When to use LLMs and when to develop custom-trained models? 

December 17, 2025
la imagen representa de manera abstracta los temas de articulo ¿Cuándo usar LLMs y cuándo desarrollar modelos entrenados a medida? . en el centro de la imagen se ve la cabeza de un robot (representando la ia) ilustrada, con elementos que lo acompañan a su alrededor.

When to Use LLMs and When to Develop Custom-Trained Models 

Enterprise artificial intelligence is at an inflection point.  
Until recently, companies that needed to automate complex tasks—such as legal document analysis, transaction classification, or specialized technical support—relied on custom-trained models. These systems were built from scratch using proprietary data and required months of development, labeling, and validation. 

Today, large language models (LLMs) such as GPT, Claude, or Llama are changing that paradigm. Thanks to their ability to understand and generate natural language, they can solve many use cases that previously required task-specific training.  

The question is no longer whether to use artificial intelligence, but rather which type of AI is most appropriate: a pre-trained, general-purpose AI, or a specialized, custom-trained AI.

LLMs and traditionally trained models

LLMs (Large Language Models) are artificial intelligence models trained on massive volumes of general text—ranging from academic articles to everyday conversations—to learn language patterns, contextual reasoning, and semantic relationships. Their strength lies in their ability to adapt to new tasks with minimal instructions or examples through prompting.  

Custom-trained models, on the other hand, are systems designed for a specific task or domain. They are trained on proprietary, labeled data, enabling very high accuracy within a limited and well-defined scope.  

In simple terms: 

  • LLMs offer breadth and versatility.
  • Custom-trained models offer depth and accuracy in bounded contexts.

Types of Tasks Covered by Out-of-the-Box LLMs

One of the main breakthroughs of LLMs is their ability to solve tasks without additional training. In B2B environments, this reduces development time and implementation costs while delivering satisfactory results in functions such as: 

  • Technical support assistance: automatic response generation, ticket analysis, or FAQ drafting.
  • Document processing: contract summarization, document type classification, or detection of critical clauses.
  • Marketing and communication automation: content writing, message segmentation, or customer feedback analysis.
  • Unstructured data analysis: interpreting emails, reports, or internal notes to extract key information.
  • Assisted software development: code autocompletion, pull request reviews, and technical documentation, as already offered by tools such as Cursor, GitHub Copilot, or Codeium.

These use cases show how pre-trained models already deliver acceptable performance in tasks where absolute precision is not critical, or where context can be provided through well-designed prompts.

When Training Custom Models Is Justified 

However, not all challenges can be solved with a general-purpose AI. There are scenarios where training a proprietary model remains the best strategic decision. 

High accuracy or strict regulation 

In sectors such as healthcare, finance, or legal services, errors are costly. Because LLMs can produce plausible but incorrect answers (also known as hallucinations), they are not reliable tools for critical decision-making. In these contexts, models trained on verified data with controlled performance metrics provide greater reliability.

Specialized domain or jargon 

When technical vocabulary does not appear in general training data—such as maritime insurance terminology, medical diagnostics, or local jurisprudence—LLMs may fail to interpret inputs correctly. Training a model with domain-specific terminology ensures predictions are relevant to the industry. 

Sensitive or confidential data 

While there are pre-trained LLMs available in on-premise versions that remove the need for subscriptions, their implementation is more expensive; as a result, most organizations opt for subscription-based models from providers. The downside of this approach is confidentiality: in regulated industries, sharing information with external LLM providers can be risky. Training models within one’s own infrastructure allows organizations to maintain full control over data and regulatory compliance (e.g., GDPR or ISO 27001), without the risk of data leakage.

Availability of large internal datasets 

When an organization has years of labeled records—such as millions of support emails or historical transactions—it makes sense to leverage that value to build models tailored to its specific reality. 

In short, custom models remain essential when accuracy, security, or specialization are top priorities. 

Comparison: Cost-Benefit, Development Speed, and Maintenance 

Criteria Pre-trained LLMs Custom-Trained Models 
Initial cost Low (subscription or API) High (training, infrastructure) 
Implementation time Fast (days or weeks) Slow (months) 
Accuracy in general domains Good Excellent only in specific domains 
Need for proprietary data Not required Essential 
Control and privacy Limited (provider-dependent) Full (on-premise or private) 
Scalability and maintenance High (automatic updates) Requires ongoing technical support 
Adaptability to new use cases High via prompt engineeringRequires retraining 

From an economic perspective, LLMs are more efficient in early project stages or when hypotheses need to be validated quickly. In contrast, custom-trained models justify their investment over the long term in critical processes where returns depend on accuracy and model ownership. 

Practical Examples in B2B Sectors 

Below are concrete examples of how B2B companies apply LLMs and custom-trained models across different industries. 

Finance 

A bank may use an LLM to answer internal employee questions about policies or to draft preliminary regulatory reports; but for real-time fraud detection—where millions of transactions must be analyzed with high precision—a model trained specifically on historical data is the ideal tool. 

Legal 

A law firm can use an LLM to summarize contracts or generate drafts, but not to identify legally risky clauses based on national jurisprudence, where a specialized model trained on local legal concepts is more appropriate. 

Technical support and customer service 

Software or telecommunications companies can use LLMs integrated into support channels (chatbots, email, intranets) to automate frequent responses. However, if they need to classify incidents using internal codes or prioritize claims by severity, a proprietary model trained on helpdesk data will deliver better results. 

In all cases, a growing trend is to combine both approaches: using an LLM as a natural language layer that orchestrates specialized models underneath, ensuring both versatility and precision.Conclusion: Toward a Hybrid and Strategic AI Approach The most advanced B2B companies are already implementing hybrid architectures, where LLMs serve as a flexible, contextual interface, while custom-trained models handle critical tasks under their supervision. Choosing between one or the other depends not only on technology, but also on the use case, risks, and available resources. LLMs offer speed, adaptability, and low barriers to entry; custom-trained models ensure control, accuracy, and differentiated value. The real challenge lies in defining a balanced AI strategy that leverages the best of both worlds.  

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