Skip to content
Tiatra, LLCTiatra, LLC
Tiatra, LLC
Information Technology Solutions for Washington, DC Government Agencies
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Services
    • IT Engineering and Support
    • Software Development
    • Information Assurance and Testing
    • Project and Program Management
  • Clients & Partners
  • Careers
  • News
  • Contact
 
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Services
    • IT Engineering and Support
    • Software Development
    • Information Assurance and Testing
    • Project and Program Management
  • Clients & Partners
  • Careers
  • News
  • Contact

The hidden costs of a ‘just fix it’ approach

When operational problems occur, many IT leaders at SMBs do what they have always done: Roll up their sleeves, fix it, and move on. The problem is solved internally or a solution is acquired that can correct or mitigate the issue. The business breathes again, and attention shifts back to sales, delivery, and growth. This behavior looks decisive. In reality, it’s a form of deferred decision-making.

This approach has kept many businesses alive. While short-term fixes make sense when there are time and cash restraints, these quick mends may have long-term consequences that might be overlooked or unrecognized in the rush to get the wheels of business back on track. Small problems are fixed today, but complexities may arise tomorrow given that hurried solutions sit alongside critical accounting, sales, and ERP systems that may not mesh well with hasty or ill-thought-out workarounds driven by individual user experience rather than holistic design.

Once implemented, the tactical solution sits alongside everything else, increasing tomorrow’s complexity with rules embedded in undocumented code, duplicated data, and cybersecurity holes. Day after day, people are creating IT workarounds, and over time, the business no longer runs on systems. It’s runs on memory and goodwill.

Collateral complexity can easily spread with nobody noticing. What once solved a local problem becomes a structural dependency. Replacing it feels risky, integrating it is expensive, and leaving it alone limits choices.  By the time leadership notices, replacement is no longer a technical decision; it’s an organizational risk.

SMBs bear liability burdens

Ironically, SMBs are more exposed to this risk than large enterprises. They have fewer buffers and less tolerance for decisions that take years to unwind. Losing optionality doesn’t just slow innovation; it diverts leadership attention and operational energy away from growth.

Studies show that small business owners lose an average of 96 minutes of productivity per day due to inefficient tools and workflows, amounting to thousands of dollars in lost value annually. Tool sprawl and integration gaps are even more costly. Research conducted by Intuit found Canadian SMBs lose more than a full workday each week navigating disconnected systems, leaving up to 49% of growth potential unrealized. Cybersecurity compounds the problem, with an average total cost per cyberattack of about $254,445 with individual cases reaching much higher when investigation, recovery, fines and reputational damage are fully accounted for.

The residual problems that arise from quick fixes and systems stitched together by workarounds go beyond the technical as well, because critical knowledge often lives in people’ s heads rather than in the organization. The business becomes fragile by default. The loss, burnout, or temporary absence of a few key individuals can create real disruption.

Administrative efforts and coordination scale faster than revenue, requiring more people just to keep things moving. Margins erode quietly, not because the business isn’t growing, but because complexity is growing faster. Over time, leadership pays the price. Senior managers are pulled into day-to-day firefighting, and strategic initiatives stall.

Act locally, think globally

A light governance model that makes intent explicit before acting would mitigate the problem. Before committing to a solution, leaders should ask what problem are we solving? Is this a one-time fix or a capability we will rely on again? What assumptions are we embedding into the business? What will this make harder in two or three years?

Most SMBs don’t ask these questions because responsibility for the whole picture is diffuse. This is not a failure of discipline but the default outcome of a minimalistic organizational design that leaves entire business domains without direct ownership. Decisions are made close to the pain, not close to the operating model. Over time, sensible choices accumulate into complexity that no one planned for and no one owns.

People compensate by reconciling data manually and layering in checks, spreadsheets, and exceptions to keep things moving. From the outside, the business looks resilient. Internally, it’s borrowing time from its people.

Avoiding this does not require enterprise-style bureaucracy. It requires someone to hold the long view, to frame decisions and to surface trade-offs before they harden into constraints. The most damaging technology decisions in SMBs are rarely the big ones, but the ones that feel too small to govern. The small, reasonable fixes made under pressure, without anyone asking about the long-term costs and the door that is left ajar to future business risks.

See also:

  • How to end the IT blame game
  • SMBs face unique IT roadmaps that AI can further confound


Read More from This Article: The hidden costs of a ‘just fix it’ approach
Source: News

Category: NewsFebruary 4, 2026
Tags: art

Post navigation

PreviousPrevious post:Why PMOs are perfectly positioned to lead AI adoptionNextNext post:다가오는 양자컴퓨팅 시대, 기업의 암호화 전략은 제자리

Related posts

칼럼 | 멀티 벤더 프로젝트 실패, 대부분은 ‘거버넌스’에서 시작된다
April 29, 2026
샤오미, MIT 라이선스 ‘미모 V2.5’ 공개···장시간 실행 AI 에이전트 시장 겨냥
April 29, 2026
SAS makes AI governance the centerpiece of its agent strategy
April 29, 2026
The boardroom divide: Why cyber resilience is a cultural asset
April 28, 2026
Samsung Galaxy AI for business: Productivity meets security
April 28, 2026
Startup tackles knowledge graphs to improve AI accuracy
April 28, 2026
Recent Posts
  • 칼럼 | 멀티 벤더 프로젝트 실패, 대부분은 ‘거버넌스’에서 시작된다
  • 샤오미, MIT 라이선스 ‘미모 V2.5’ 공개···장시간 실행 AI 에이전트 시장 겨냥
  • SAS makes AI governance the centerpiece of its agent strategy
  • The boardroom divide: Why cyber resilience is a cultural asset
  • Samsung Galaxy AI for business: Productivity meets security
Recent Comments
    Archives
    • April 2026
    • March 2026
    • February 2026
    • January 2026
    • December 2025
    • November 2025
    • October 2025
    • September 2025
    • August 2025
    • July 2025
    • June 2025
    • May 2025
    • April 2025
    • March 2025
    • February 2025
    • January 2025
    • December 2024
    • November 2024
    • October 2024
    • September 2024
    • August 2024
    • July 2024
    • June 2024
    • May 2024
    • April 2024
    • March 2024
    • February 2024
    • January 2024
    • December 2023
    • November 2023
    • October 2023
    • September 2023
    • August 2023
    • July 2023
    • June 2023
    • May 2023
    • April 2023
    • March 2023
    • February 2023
    • January 2023
    • December 2022
    • November 2022
    • October 2022
    • September 2022
    • August 2022
    • July 2022
    • June 2022
    • May 2022
    • April 2022
    • March 2022
    • February 2022
    • January 2022
    • December 2021
    • November 2021
    • October 2021
    • September 2021
    • August 2021
    • July 2021
    • June 2021
    • May 2021
    • April 2021
    • March 2021
    • February 2021
    • January 2021
    • December 2020
    • November 2020
    • October 2020
    • September 2020
    • August 2020
    • July 2020
    • June 2020
    • May 2020
    • April 2020
    • January 2020
    • December 2019
    • November 2019
    • October 2019
    • September 2019
    • August 2019
    • July 2019
    • June 2019
    • May 2019
    • April 2019
    • March 2019
    • February 2019
    • January 2019
    • December 2018
    • November 2018
    • October 2018
    • September 2018
    • August 2018
    • July 2018
    • June 2018
    • May 2018
    • April 2018
    • March 2018
    • February 2018
    • January 2018
    • December 2017
    • November 2017
    • October 2017
    • September 2017
    • August 2017
    • July 2017
    • June 2017
    • May 2017
    • April 2017
    • March 2017
    • February 2017
    • January 2017
    Categories
    • News
    Meta
    • Log in
    • Entries feed
    • Comments feed
    • WordPress.org
    Tiatra LLC.

    Tiatra, LLC, based in the Washington, DC metropolitan area, proudly serves federal government agencies, organizations that work with the government and other commercial businesses and organizations. Tiatra specializes in a broad range of information technology (IT) development and management services incorporating solid engineering, attention to client needs, and meeting or exceeding any security parameters required. Our small yet innovative company is structured with a full complement of the necessary technical experts, working with hands-on management, to provide a high level of service and competitive pricing for your systems and engineering requirements.

    Find us on:

    FacebookTwitterLinkedin

    Submitclear

    Tiatra, LLC
    Copyright 2016. All rights reserved.