Is your network a Frankenstein of mismatched tools and quick fixes? That is what a lot of small-business IT looks like. Companies bolt on solutions without thinking about how they fit together, and over time it drags on operations. The result is tech debt, and not the money kind. It is hard to climb out of without taking an honest look at how you run IT. Here is what it is and how to stop it.
Tech debt is not the price of a new server. It is the accumulating cost of choosing the easy short-term fix over the smarter long-term decision, again and again. Running a home router for a 20-person office. Keeping an old server alive just because it has not died yet, though it could any day. Each choice may have made sense at the time, back when you had five people or that server was new, but the small calls add up and the bill comes due later.
You cannot fix what you have not measured, so step one is a full audit of your infrastructure. Document every asset on the network, from laptops to software, and go hunting for the invisible ones too, the things running quietly that most of your staff never see. Then look at the organs of the business, your operating systems, applications, and security tools, and confirm they are all still supported by their vendors. Finally, check the connective tissue, your cabling, VPN stability, and internet speeds, because that is where a lot of hidden failure points hide.
Does your business have tech debt? Almost certainly, to some degree, depending on how disciplined your IT buying has been. The fastest way out is to work with a managed provider who can look at your current setup, find where it is cracking, and help you replace the patchwork with something that actually holds together.
Book a call and we will audit your setup and map a path out of tech debt.
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