Skip to main content

· 22 min read

featured-image

You approved the rollout. Procurement signed the contract. IT packaged the installer, pushed it to devices, and the vendor marked the deployment as complete.

Six months later, finance wants to know whether the renewal makes sense. Department heads say the software is “in use”, but nobody can say by whom, how often, or whether people are using the part that justified the spend in the first place. Vendor dashboards show logins and seat counts. They rarely show whether the tool changed how work gets done.

That gap is where most software ROI arguments fall apart. Product adoption metrics fix it, if you measure the right things and ignore the vanity numbers.

For enterprise IT, adoption isn't a simple SaaS question. It's an endpoint question, a workflow question, and often a hybrid-work question. You need to know which tools are installed, which are opened, which are helping people reach value quickly, and which licences are sitting idle on machines that haven't touched the product in weeks.

· 17 min read

featured-image

The most common advice on agency time tracking is still wrong. It says: track every hour so you can bill clients properly. That's too narrow, and teams can feel it straight away.

When time tracking is framed as invoice support, people treat it like admin overhead or hidden supervision. They fill gaps from memory, round numbers, skip awkward categories, and stop caring after the first busy week. The data looks tidy on a report and useless in real operations.

A better implementation starts somewhere else. Track time to understand how work is happening, where scope starts slipping, where meetings eat delivery time, and where privacy lines sit for a Dutch or EU-based team. Billing still matters. It just can't be the whole story.

· 18 min read

featured-image

You already have the data. App usage by team. Ticket volumes. Build times. Focus time. Licence counts. Maybe even a dashboard full of trend lines that update every hour.

The hard part is knowing whether any of it is good, bad, or just normal for a team like yours.

That's where peer group analysis stops being a finance term and becomes an operations tool. If one engineering squad spends more time in Jira and less in an IDE than another, that might signal a delivery problem. Or it might just reflect a support-heavy product area. If IT sees lower usage of a paid tool in one department, that could mean waste. It could also mean the team has a different workflow and never needed the licence in the first place.

Averages don't solve that. Broad benchmarks don't solve it either. You need a fair comparison set.

· 16 min read

featured-image

You know the scene. One team exports SaaS usage data into a spreadsheet. HR has workforce data in another system. Security logs sit in a SIEM. Endpoint telemetry lives with EUC or IT operations. Somebody asks a simple question such as who can view application usage by department, and the room goes quiet.

That's usually the point where people say they need “better governance”. What they often mean is they need less confusion. Clear ownership. Clear rules. Fewer meetings where everyone is sure somebody else approved the access model.

A data governance framework is useful because it turns that mess into operating rules. Not a theory deck. Not a committee charter no one reads. A working model for who decides, who approves, what gets logged, how data is classified, how long it stays around, and what happens when a request lands on the wrong desk.

· 24 min read

featured-image

Monday starts with a licence renewal you didn't expect, three laptops that missed a patch window, a manager asking whether the new collaboration tool is in use, and a security question about what endpoint data you're collecting on remote staff. That's a normal week for most IT teams now. The hard part isn't finding another framework. It's deciding what to measure, what to ignore, and how to improve operations without turning the department into a reporting factory.

That's where good IT management best practices separate themselves from a tidy checklist. Useful practice shows up in purchasing, deployment, support, privacy controls, and change reviews. It gives you enough visibility to act early, but not so much noise that your team spends the day chasing dashboards.

The teams that get traction usually make one shift first. They stop treating governance, security, adoption, and support as separate tracks. Software usage affects budget. Device visibility affects security. Training affects analytics adoption. Privacy rules affect what you can monitor and how you explain it. Once you run IT that way, decisions get cleaner.

This list stays close to that reality. Each practice is measurable. Each one has trade-offs. And each one works better when you build it with privacy-first analytics instead of invasive monitoring.