Let’s be honest: every South African business owner has had this thought at least once. “This laptop is slow, but it still works. We’ll upgrade next year.” Next year becomes next year. And next year. Until one Monday morning, your server crashes mid-invoice run, your team loses three hours of work, and you’re frantically Googling “data recovery near me” while a client waits on hold.
We get it. In an economy where the rand-dollar exchange rate makes imported hardware sting and where every rand counts, “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it” feels like sound financial sense. But here’s the uncomfortable truth Oasis IT has learned from over 25 years of keeping Johannesburg businesses running: old technology is rarely “not broke.” It’s just breaking slowly, quietly, and in ways that don’t show up on a balance sheet – until they do, in a much bigger number.
The Hidden Tax on Productivity
Old tech doesn’t announce itself with a dramatic crash (although that does happen, more on that later). Most of the time, it just taxes you in minutes. The five minutes your receptionist waits for the system to boot. The eight minutes your accounts team spends restarting Excel after it freezes – again. The fifteen minutes lost every time someone has to reboot the router because the Wi-Fi has “that thing” it does on Tuesdays.
Multiply those minutes by every employee, every day, every week. Research from outfits like Gartner has long pegged unplanned IT downtime at thousands of dollars per minute for larger enterprises – and while your SME isn’t losing that much, the proportional hit to a 15-person business is just as painful. You’re not just losing time. You’re losing momentum, focus, and the compounding effect of a team that can actually get into a rhythm.
Security: The Cost You Don’t See Coming
Here’s where “making do” turns dangerous. Outdated systems are a hacker’s favourite playground. Older software stops receiving security patches, older hardware can’t run modern endpoint protection properly, and older operating systems are riddled with known vulnerabilities that cybercriminals actively scan for – because why would they bother with something hard to crack when there are thousands of businesses still running unpatched systems?
South Africa has, unfortunately, become a notable target for cybercrime in recent years, with ransomware attacks against local businesses making regular headlines. A single ransomware incident can cost a small business not just the ransom (which you should never pay, and never have to, with the right backups) but days or weeks of downtime, reputational damage, and in some cases, the business itself. Loyal customers don’t stick around to find out if you’ve recovered.
This is exactly the gap Oasis IT’s managed cybersecurity and IT support services are built to close – proactive monitoring, patching, and protection so that vulnerabilities get closed before they become headlines.
The Compatibility Trap
Then there’s the slow, creeping compatibility problem. Your old accounting software doesn’t talk to the new cloud-based CRM your sales team wants. Your ancient server can’t run the latest version of the software your industry now requires for compliance. Your five-year-old laptops can’t handle the video calls your clients now expect as standard.
Each of these is a small inconvenience on its own. Together, they form a wall between your business and the tools that competitors – often smaller, scrappier competitors – are using to move faster and serve clients better. “Making do” doesn’t just cost you efficiency today; it costs you the agility to grow tomorrow.
The Maintenance Spiral
Here’s a number that surprises a lot of business owners: keeping old hardware limping along often costs more, over time, than replacing it. Specialist repairs for outdated equipment get pricier as parts become scarce. IT support calls become more frequent as ageing systems fail more often. And every hour your IT provider spends nursing a five-year-old server back to life is an hour not spent strengthening the rest of your network.
It’s the IT equivalent of patching a leaking roof every winter instead of just replacing it – except each patch job costs nearly as much as a new roof would have, and you’re still getting wet.
So, What’s the Alternative?
This isn’t a call to rip out every system and spend money you don’t have. It’s a call to be strategic. At Oasis IT, we work with businesses across Johannesburg and beyond to assess what’s actually costing you – in time, risk, and rands – versus what a measured, planned upgrade path looks like. Sometimes that means a phased hardware refresh. Sometimes it’s moving key systems to the cloud so you’re not at the mercy of one ageing on-site server. Sometimes it’s simply tightening up your cybersecurity so the equipment you already have is properly protected.
The goal is never “spend more.” It’s “spend smarter” – putting your IT budget where it actually protects your business, rather than pouring it into the bottomless pit of keeping old systems on life support.
The Bottom Line
“Making do” feels free. It isn’t. It’s a cost spread out over lost hours, security risk, missed opportunities, and the eventual, much larger bill when something finally gives way completely. The businesses that thrive – even in a tough South African economic climate – are the ones that treat technology as an investment in resilience, not an expense to be postponed indefinitely.
If your systems have been running on “let’s just get through this year,” it might be time for a conversation. Oasis IT has spent over two decades helping Johannesburg businesses move from “making do” to genuinely running well. Let’s talk about where your technology stands – and where it could be taking you instead.