The Quiet Loss Checklist
12 places profit leaks out of your technology, and how to spot each one in under an hour. Most of these losses never show up as a line item. They show up as payroll, delay, and risk you have quietly learned to live with.
Work through the 12 checks below. Each one is a specific question you can answer with information you already have, or can get with one email to whoever handles your IT. Mark each check as you go. Your results stay in your browser and are never sent anywhere.
Licenses for people who no longer work here
5 minThe leak: Software subscriptions keep billing after someone leaves. Nobody cancels them because nobody owns the list.
Why it matters: Every orphaned license is pure waste, and a departed user whose account is still active is also an open door.
Two tools doing the same job
5 minThe leak: Overlapping subscriptions pile up over the years. Two file-sharing tools, two video platforms, two project trackers, each paid monthly.
Why it matters: Duplicate tools cost twice and split your data in half, so nobody can find anything either.
The same problem fixed twice
5 minThe leak: A recurring issue gets patched every time it appears, but nobody asks why it keeps appearing. You pay for the fix again and again.
Why it matters: A repeat issue means you are paying for symptoms while the cause keeps billing you in staff time.
The backup nobody has tested
2 minThe leak: You pay for backup every month, but nobody has proven it can actually restore your data. An untested backup is a hope, not a plan.
Why it matters: You are paying premiums on an insurance policy nobody has read. You find out what it covers on the worst possible day.
Retention mistaken for backup
3 minThe leak: “It's in the cloud” is treated as “it's backed up.” Native trash and version history in Google Workspace or Microsoft 365 expire, and deleted data is simply gone.
Why it matters: The most common data loss in small organizations today is a quiet deletion discovered after the recovery window closed.
Hardware past its useful life, with no plan
5 minThe leak: Aging computers, servers, and network gear slow people down for years, then fail at the worst time and get replaced in a panic at premium prices.
Why it matters: Emergency purchases cost more, take longer, and land in the budget as a surprise instead of a plan.
Payroll spent waiting on technology
10 minThe leak: Slow logins, freezing apps, flaky Wi-Fi, the workaround everyone knows. None of it generates a ticket. All of it burns payroll.
Why it matters: This is usually the single largest quiet loss on this list, and it never appears on any invoice.
The one person everything routes through
3 minThe leak: One capable person, often an office manager or the “good with computers” employee, fields every IT question instead of doing the job you hired them for.
Why it matters: You are paying a professional salary for amateur IT support, and everything they know lives in one head.
Apps you never approved, connected to your data
5 minThe leak: Staff connect free apps and browser extensions to their work accounts. Each one gets access to email, files, or contacts, and nobody reviews the list.
Why it matters: Unreviewed app access is both a data-exposure risk and a sign that nobody is governing the platform your whole team lives in.
Security tools you pay for but never verify
5 minThe leak: Antivirus, endpoint protection, and multi-factor authentication were “set up” once. Nobody can show they are still deployed on every device and enforced for every account.
Why it matters: Assumed protection is the most expensive kind. You carry the cost of the tools and the full weight of the risk.
Invoices you did not approve in advance
5 minThe leak: Project labor, “out of scope” hours, and mystery line items appear on IT invoices after the work is done, when you have no leverage to question them.
Why it matters: Surprise invoices are not just a cost. They tell you whose interests your provider’s pricing model serves.
Next year’s technology spend is a mystery
2 minThe leak: There is no technology roadmap and no budget forecast, so every IT cost arrives as a surprise and every decision is made under pressure.
Why it matters: Unplanned spending is always the most expensive kind, and it crowds out the investments that would actually move you forward.
Your technology is talking. This is how you listen.
Work through the checks above and your results will show here. Every “Leaking” and every “Not sure” is a place money is quietly walking out the door, and every one of them is fixable.
You just did in under an hour what most organizations never do: looked directly at the quiet losses instead of living with them. If you want a second set of eyes on what you found, I’m happy to look at it with you. I’m Matt. Let's step forward.
The Quiet Loss Checklist is published by Stepping Forward Technology, Colorado Springs. Nothing you mark on this page is collected, stored, or sent anywhere.