Imagine one of your top employees suddenly stops caring. They aren’t leaving the company—they’re just leaving the conversation. This is the reality of quiet quitting, and it often starts with something as small as a “ping.” We’re talking about notification fatigue, the silent productivity killer. Let’s break down why your team is drowning in pings and how you can throw them a lifeline.
The Trojan Horse didn’t succeed because the Grecian armies broke down the walls of Troy; it succeeded because the Trojans fell for the Greek army’s trick and brought the secret war machine—with a small group of Greek soldiers—inside their walls. It was a tactically brilliant plan, and ended what was reportedly a decade-long siege in a matter of hours. Whether or not the original story is based in truth, your business is potentially in danger from a similar issue: a threat coming in on what seems to be a trustworthy package. The difference is that this time, the package is a platform or tool you’ve procured from a third-party vendor.
Does your business operate in the moment, or does it prioritize what’s just around the corner? As a business owner, you have a tricky balance to strike between the two, and where technology is concerned, the answer is not always so clear-cut. But it’s generally better for your business to look at technology management with the perspective offered by an IT roadmap to inform your decision-making, from everyday implementations to major deployments.
As we stand on the threshold of a new year, it’s worth noting that the term “cybersecurity” didn’t even enter the common lexicon until the late 1980s. Before that, we just called it “computer security”—mostly involving locking the server room door and hoping nobody guessed the password was “admin.” Fast forward to today, and the game has changed entirely. “Hoping for the best” is no longer a viable business plan. As you prep your resolutions, it’s time to hit the ground running with a cybersecurity posture that is as modern as the threats we face—a goal that will require training for your entire team.
Are you blindly sprinting forward where your technology is involved, picking things that sound good, hoping you have enough forward momentum to reach the next stop? Unfortunately, this approach is often an option that many businesses take, usually to their detriment. We want to remind you that you there is a better way: creating an IT roadmap to strategically merge your technology with your more functional business goals, helping you progress with every dollar invested.