Learn why it may be beneficial to lease new equipment instead of buying outright in this comparison story.
When talking about tech refreshes with clients, we often notice that the decision is both philosophical and practical. Companies pair questions of cost and implementation with a desire for control that can dictate how they eventually proceed.
Think about your current tech infrastructure. How many machines are older than three years? That’s the average length for manufacturer warranties. This means anything older will incur additional costs every time it needs maintenance.
When it’s time to upgrade, organizations must decide whether to finance the new equipment themselves or sign a leasing agreement. It’s understandable for a company to want complete control over its tech infrastructure. In that case, they alone would make the decisions on when, how and why to upgrade. It feels liberating to have that power.
However, this can also limit operational potential — especially if the tech sticks around past its ideal lifespan. Either way, it’s worth talking about it. Once you determine which path to follow, contact your equipment financing partner to get the conversation started.
Let’s look at this debate from a practical point of view. Company X and Company Y have similar situations, yet they choose different tech refresh paths. These stories are based on actual interactions we have with our clients.
Company X has been using quickly outdated technology for five years, long past the typical three-year cycle for most tech lifespans. As a result, the company has experienced major maintenance costs and now operates outside warranty for many of its systems.
They now reached the time when a refresh is completely necessary. It’s needed just to stay current with new security threats that the old systems can’t handle.
However, since they originally purchased the equipment outright, all management of the refresh falls to the company itself. Moreover, the company doesn’t want to relinquish that control, they want to buy another round of equipment with cash.
The equipment purchasing process becomes a transactional effort. In another five years, or sooner, they’ll be back in the same place —with another batch of outdated tech they need to offload and replace.
Now let’s look at Company Y, which is also battling with outdated technology. However, instead of buying new equipment, they instead pursue leasing.
Again, there’s an element of control here. But contrary to what you might think, leasing doesn’t mean relinquishing control over the equipment. It’s about smarter control.
Company Y enters into an agreement that provides a refresh every three years, to align with standard manufacturer warranties. Through the agreement, Company Y works with their leasing partner to offload their old tech before the warranties expire. This can provide a much higher residual than simply recycling out-of-warranty scrap tech.
Within the agreement, the tech leasing partner helps Company Y establish an efficient refresh process every three years, learning and optimizing each time. Company Y is also better protected from data hacks and security threats, because they can stay within the tech’s natural lifespan.
The technology process, rather than a transactional, one-time event, becomes more of an ongoing strategy. Control doesn’t change much — the company can still remove tech as needed, or change their machines if they adopt new IT and/or regulatory standards.
Fast forward five years later. Company X and Y both now have refreshed systems, but there are key differences in the process.
There are many hurdles — both practical and philosophical — in a tech lifecycle process. From a philosophical mindset, this can become a debate about control. However, you might be surprised that the differences aren’t that drastic. When it comes to tech refreshes, ask yourself: do you see it more as a transaction, or a strategy?