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Can you handle the truth about your company's IT?

Can you handle the truth about your company's IT?

By:  Dan McLean  On: 06 Nov 2006 For: IT World Canada Creator

It’s what you don’t know that can hurt you. What a company doesn’t know about the true state of its computing hardware and software can be costly in terms of inefficiency and risky in terms of the exposure to security threats.

It’s what you don’t know that can hurt you. What a company doesn’t know about the true state of its computing hardware and software can be costly in terms of inefficiency and risky in terms of the exposure to security threats.

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Consider what you think your business has in the way of hardware and software: how current is it, how productive is it making your employees and what danger is there in having your company’s data or information compromised? Then go and find out the truth. It may shock you to know what you don’t know.

Then ask yourself: when was the last time your business took stock of what it has, or assessed if IT investments deliver the function, efficiencies and productivity you expect?

Truth is that many business operators don’t have a clear picture. And not knowing the state of your company’s computing resources means the business probably isn’t as successful as it could be, since the right computing tools may not be in the right employee hands. On top of that, a lack of insight into the current state of software fixes and patches may mean that systems are highly vulnerable to intrusion or failure.

What a company thinks and what it actually knows about its IT can be entirely different, according to Toronto-based IT product and services company Softchoice Corp. Softchoice has during the past couple of years has conducted more than 200 IT inventory assessments for Canadian and U.S. companies both large and small, examining the state of hardware and software components.

The IT product and services company in June released a report detailing the results of its many investigations. Softchoice found that on average 39 per cent of desktops and notebooks used by businesses surveyed were older than they thought. And nearly two-thirds of organizations surveyed are violating their own operating system deployment policies – and didn’t even know it. Softchoice also found that half of all PCs owned by those surveyed had moderate to severe infestations of “malware” – malicious software, including things like viruses, worms, or Trojans. Malware exposes these computing resources to potentially disastrous risk and seriously slows system performance. These investigations also found that one in 16 corporate PCs is missing anti-virus software entirely, while 23 per cent of PCs are missing major operating system service packs.

Arguably more alarming is a state of denial that exists in many companies.

“What we see are two attitudes: one, I don’t have a problem or, two, even if I do have a problem, I don’t have a problem,” says Edwin Jansen, manager of the Softchoice services group that was responsible for the study.

The price of denial for most businesses is a cumulative cost. Problems add up when there are a number of individual systems that need all sorts of quick-fix software patches and virus signature updates. And a business may not give too much thought to how it’s its IT professionals are struggling to support aging hardware just to keep these systems running until they realize how much of their time is spent doing just that.


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Dan McLean Dan McLean is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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