Spring Clean Your IT: 8 Things Your Business Should Fix This Month
Because nobody ever got excited about digital decluttering… until now.
Spring is in the air! Birds are tweeting, flowers are blooming, and your IT systems are quietly plotting revenge for being ignored since last autumn. It’s time for your ultimate IT spring cleaning checklist, a practical guide to polish your tech, boost security, and maybe even save you some cash this season.
1. Refresh Your IT maintenance best practices
If you think “maintenance” only applies to cars and annoying vendor emails, think again. Good IT upkeep is like brushing your teeth; you feel weird missing a day. From patching software to checking backups, routine maintenance keeps systems secure and efficient. Spot a missed update? Patch it pronto. It’s not glamorous, but neither is explaining a ransomware attack to a boardroom of directors. Maintaining good IT habits helps prevent attacks and reduces downtime exponentially. Regular audits also give you a chance to plan for upgrades instead of panicked purchases.
2. Clean up old users (yes, that includes ex‑employees)
Ever had a team member leave and still had access to company systems? Removing dormant accounts isn’t just neat, it’s critical for security. Old users with access are like unlocked back doors for cybercriminals. Pro tip: tie user removal to your HR exit checklist so accounts are deactivated the same day people leave.
3. Time to remove unused licences
Monthly licence fees can quietly drain your budget like a leaky tap. Businesses often pay for software seats nobody has used in years! Run a licence audit and cancel what’s collecting metaphorical dust. You’ll tidy up finances and simplify software management, two wins for the price of one.
4. Say no to weak passwords
We all started that Excel spreadsheet of passwords… until someone accidentally emailed it to the team. Weak or repeated passwords are a top entry point for attacks, and updating them is one of the easiest items on this spring list. If your team struggles to remember passwords, invest in a password manager, much less stressful than “password123!” showing up in a breach report.
5. Check firmware and updates on outdated devices
Yes, even that faithful laptop with a cracked “F” key. Hardware that’s no longer supported is an invitation for vulnerabilities because security patches stop rolling long before you’ve had your money’s worth. Make a quick inventory, note devices past support, and schedule upgrades where needed.
6. Declutter your digital storage
Is your shared drive a labyrinth of folders from 2015? Decluttering data improves performance, speeds backups, and makes everything easier to find. Archive old data, delete duplicates, and make sure naming conventions are clear; your future self will thank you.
7. Review backup and disaster recovery plans
You’ve heard it before: “Hope for the best, prepare for the worst.” If your backups haven’t been tested, now’s the time. A disaster scenario isn’t about if: it’s about when. Run a restore simulation to confirm your plan works, and update documentation, so your whole team knows exactly what to do.
8. Run a light cybersecurity awareness session
Even the best IT systems can be undone by one unlucky click. A quick team refresher on spotting phishing emails and social engineering goes a long way toward keeping cyber threats at bay. Training doesn’t have to be boring. Make it interactive, maybe even competitive.