
Your business hasn't stood still since January and your systems haven't either.
You've added people to the team, adopted new tools and made fast calls to keep things moving.
What's hard to keep track of is the trail those decisions leave behind, including who still has access to systems they no longer need, where your data ended up and who's responsible for what.
By July, most businesses are running on assumptions about how their systems work. Here are four things to examine before those assumptions become expensive.
1. Access was expanded. Was it ever revisited?
New hires came in and needed to get on systems quickly. Other employees moved into new roles and picked up permissions along the way. Temporary access was granted to keep a project moving or cover for someone who was out.
But access almost never gets revisited after it's needed, which means the picture inside most businesses looks like this:
People have more privileges than their current role requires
Former employees likely still carry active permissions
You don't have a clean view of who can reach what
It's time to ask the question, do the right people have the correct access today?
Do you know who can see what inside your business right now? If that answer takes longer than a few seconds, pay attention.
2. Your tools solved problems while creating new ones
Your sales team needed a better way to track conversations, so a CRM was added. Marketing brought on a platform to run campaigns faster. Finance adopted an application to simplify billing. Operations signed up for a project tool that seemed lightweight at the time.
Every one of those was a reasonable decision. Collectively, they created something messier.
Data now lives in more places, integrations were set up quickly and may not be working as intended, and visibility across systems has fragmented.
When systems coexist without anyone owning the full picture, the risk doesn't announce itself. It shows up later in slower decisions, inconsistent reporting and gaps that belong to nobody.
Do your systems work together or is your team quietly working around them? By the time that question becomes urgent, it's been a problem for a while.
3. Your backup and recovery confidence is probably assumed
Most businesses have backups in place and operate under a false sense of security, believing they're protected. Recovery is rarely tested, the timeline to restore operations is unclear, and ownership of the process often isn't defined.
When something goes wrong, whether it's ransomware, a server failure or an accidental deletion, the conversation starts with "wait, who handles this?"
Having backups is not the same as being able to recover. The difference between them only becomes clear at the worst possible time.
If something went down tomorrow, would you know exactly what happens next? Or would you be figuring it out on the spot?
4. Responsibility has blurred as your business has grown
Remember back when who owned what was clear?
Your internal team handled certain systems, vendors handled others and responsibilities were roughly defined, even if nobody had documented them.
Then systems expanded, new vendors came in, internal roles shifted and somewhere in the middle of all that growth, ownership got blurry.
Now when something breaks and it crosses systems or providers, the question of who takes the lead often gets answered in real time. Issues bounce, small problems sit unresolved longer than they should and nobody knows whose job it is to fix the problems.
When something alarming happens in your systems, do you know who is responsible for resolving it? Or do you figure it out in the moment?
Most risk doesn't come from what's broken
It comes from what's changed without being revisited.
Businesses that stay ahead of this aren't doing anything complicated. They have a clear view of who has access to what, they know their backups work, and they know who owns what when something goes wrong.
That clarity lets them move fast without things falling through the cracks.
That's what we're here to help you achieve. A discovery call takes 10 minutes and will help give you a straight answer on where your systems stand today and what needs attention.
Call us at 435-414-8483 or visit https://nomoreglitch.com/discoverycall/ to schedule yours.
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