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Time is Money: When to Fix & When to Replace

Column: Business In Practice

From the June 2010 Issue

Fix it or replace it? Every day we face this question. As business owners and
advisors to our clients, there are an infinite number of things we could make
better. The choice is ours. For some, the answer is “intuitive”
and for others, it involves detailed analysis. The risk of course is the time
and money it takes to fix or replace something.

Generally, we assume that fixing something is easier than replacing it, both
from a time and money perspective. Let’s take that favorite car you’ve
had for a number of years. First, one thing goes wrong, and then another. As
you make the recurring trip to the repairman, you are soon asking yourself should
you continue fixing the car until the sum of the parts is greater than the original
price or replace it with a new car?

Fixing it is the incrementally easier thing to do but at some point though,
you realize that your time, peace of mind and dollars would be better suited
invested in a new car. As you start to do a little research on some new cars
you learn about new features such as Bluetooth or better fuel efficiency that
you realize you’ve been missing. In fact, you become convinced that you
can’t live without it and off you go to buy the new car.

In the end, you spent time and money, on both. Minimizing the time on fixing
something you are going to replace is hard to do. Knowing when to fix and when
to replace has been critical to my success at work.

I believe that we all spend time fixing our processes and people more than
we like. The reason we don’t replace them is the cost both in absolute
dollars and the emotional reasons behind it. Understanding the dollars is simpler
than understanding the emotion. How many of us held on to that first car longer
than we should because of the memories we created with it? That emotional attachment
is very strong with the systems and people we put in place to run our businesses.
Over time, we become emotionally attached to the way we do things, and to the
people we hire. That attachment can be an albatross around our neck.

PEOPLE: WHEN TO REPLACE
I know it’s a tough subject but as entrepreneurs we have to deal with
people issues, and replacing people is possibly the hardest thing we do. Both
employees and customers are people. Sometimes we need to let them go, but we
don’t. We hope that we can “fix” them. That somehow they will
improve their attitude, be more appreciative of our schedule or do what we need
them to do. Unfortunately, the success rate is low and the time involved is
very high.

Why don’t we let them go? It’s because we become emotionally attached.
This will sound harsh, but one of the best pieces of advice I have ever received
was from an investor who asked me if I knew when Venture Capitalists thought
was the best time to fire the CEO? “The first time they think of it”.
In my experience the same is true for any person (employee or customer) and
that is why it is critical to removing the emotional attachment.

PROCESSES: WHEN TO SWITCH TO SAAS
What about processes? My last column discussed the advantages of SaaS/cloud
computing. I believe and know that the business world is moving towards data
being stored in the clouds. The advantages are too great. It’s more secure,
has built in disaster recovery, provides for better support, and speeds up the
product development timeline. That said, the move to SaaS has not become main
stream. Desktop software companies continue to spend significantly more on their
desktop products fixing things, not replacing things. Small businesses continue
to be wary of “the cloud” and are sticking with the tried and true
solutions for the last 20 years installing upgrades and patches when available.
What a shame.

Accountants are fortunate to have an extremely robust ecosystem when it comes
to SaaS. There are great workflow, accounting, tax and finance solutions in
the clouds. The clouds mean no more routing paper around the office and syncing
client data with desktop machines and servers, automatic scanning and conversion
of tax/financial documents, multi-user anytime/anywhere access to data, and
much better security and default disaster recovery. Best of all, once you make
the switch, you no longer have to spend time fixing or upgrading your tools.
The “fixing” is done for you. What a deal!

SaaS applications drive tremendous time savings by better automating business
processes, but another huge advantage is your savings in IT costs. Saving you
time and headache when it comes to managing complex server and network infrastructures
and investing time every time those systems needs to be fixed. Have you thought
about the time savings and what you could do with it? Add more customers, increase
revenue, or play an extra round of golf. Why continue fixing your desktop applications
knowing that someday you will need to replace it with a SaaS application? What
are you waiting for? Now’s the time to start switching over your applications.
Time is money!