The issue isn't that organizations are careless. The real problem is a lack of the right insights to steer effectively. Without clear visibility into which devices are active, when they need to be replaced, how they perform, and what they truly cost, every decision becomes a gamble. And in practice, that gamble often turns out to be far more expensive than expected.
In this article, we explain why mid-market organizations so quickly lose control of their device costs, and how a modern, centrally managed workplace model offers a way forward.
Many organizations believe they have a reasonable overview of their device landscape. But when they are asked to produce an accurate inventory, reality often tells a different story. Laptops once assigned to temporary employees, devices that were never formally decommissioned, hardware sitting in cupboards "just in case," licenses requested independently by different departments…
These are familiar scenarios, and they typically lead to five major issues:
The result is an environment where costs quietly accumulate, without anyone having a clear view of where they originate. Quite simply, you can't control what you can't fully see.
When organizations lack a clear understanding of their device needs, purchasing inevitably becomes reactive. A new employee starts tomorrow? A laptop is needed immediately, often whatever happens to be available. A device fails unexpectedly? An urgent replacement follows.
These ad hoc decisions have two major consequences. First, costs increase, because rush orders are almost always more expensive than planned purchases. Second, budgeting becomes nearly impossible. Finance sees expenses appearing outside forecasts, IT can't create reliable projections, and devices are replaced based on incidents rather than a defined lifecycle strategy.
As a result, device costs don't just become higher than necessary — they become unpredictable. And that unpredictability is the exact opposite of what modern organizations need: control and consistency.
The lifespan of a device is not a fixed given. It depends on usage, workload, maintenance, configuration, and timely updates. Without proper lifecycle management, devices are often replaced either too late or too early.
Some devices are kept in service longer than is reasonable, leading to declining performance, more incidents, and lost employee productivity. At the same time, devices are sometimes replaced even though a simple repair or reconfiguration would have been sufficient.
Then there are the costs that arise when an ITAD process is missing altogether: devices that are not securely wiped, missing certification for data removal, or hardware that is neither refurbished nor recycled. This is not only financially inefficient, but also creates risks in terms of compliance and sustainability.
Lifecycle management is therefore not an administrative exercise — it is a strategic approach to controlling costs, reducing risk, and improving performance.
For many IT teams, the workplace still consists of a patchwork of manual tasks. Onboarding is handled device by device, updates are not always rolled out automatically, and issues are only addressed once an employee submits a ticket.
This reactive support model generates unnecessary costs: incidents that could have been prevented, remediation efforts that take longer than needed, and employees losing valuable hours due to disruptions. The hidden cost of lost productivity is rarely factored in, yet it often exceeds the cost of the hardware itself.
The result is a constant strain on support teams, recurring issues, and IT teams spending their time firefighting instead of focusing on optimization and innovation.
The solution doesn't lie in working harder or deploying more tools. The key is standardization + automation + insight. Organizations that successfully bring their device costs under control do so by implementing:
When these elements come together, surprises disappear. One cost pattern emerges, one lifecycle, one set of clear agreements. The organization starts steering based on data rather than incidents — and that is what makes efficient management possible.
To address these challenges, Cegeka — together with HP (ProConnect) — developed the Cegeka Modern Workplace. This solution combines pre-configured HP devices with the HP Workforce Experience Platform (WXP), which provides real-time insights into performance, stability, and usage. This allows issues to be detected early and extends the lifespan of devices.
On top of this technological foundation, Cegeka adds a complete service layer: from persona design and device standardization to deployment, support, monitoring, security, lifecycle management, and certified end-of-life processing. The result is a standardized and scalable workplace model, specifically designed for the needs of the mid-market — offering a clear TCO structure and predictable, fixed monthly costs.
This way, you gain control not only over your device costs, but also over performance, security, and the employee experience. From a reactive cost item to a manageable, predictable source of value.
Want to discover how to structurally control the total cost of your workplace, while simultaneously improving employee experience? Feel free to reach out to us.
Cegeka Modern Workplace: an enterprise workplace experience, built for the mid-market.