thecomputerguy
Well-Known Member
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I sold this client all of their computers (5) and their server about 7 years ago. When their server was nearing the end of it's 5-Year next business day warranty, I started the process of explaining that all of the computers & server are all on the same lifecycle which is 5-6 years and we are nearing the end of that. Of course they delay, don't listen, brush aside like all clients do.
The server and their workstations are now 7 years old and starting to have some significant issues. The server is shutting itself off at night and not turning back on so they come in and nothing is working 2-3 days a week. Desktops are glitching out due to 7 years of crap on them. Network hardware is in desperate need of an upgrade, typical stuff that happens over 7 years.
I explain to them that the next move would be a significant push into the cloud which would include new computers.
- The server would be removed entirely and not replaced. It holds a legacy database which is only being used to reference old data. No new data is being added, and there is no need for it to be shared anymore. So this database/program could be loaded onto a workstation.
- Server also hosts a local 1-user Quickbooks Desktop database that would be moved to a hosted option
- Folder redirection would be removed in favor of OneDrive backup
- DHCP/DNS would be redirected back to the network appliance
- Their main data is in Dropbox, mainly because they prefer it and changing their workflow to SP/Teams simply isn't worth the hassle
- They have downsized from 5 workstations down to 3.
So I explain this, and say it would be simple to just bring in 3 new desktops start with a clean slate, and give everything a clean a refreshed start. Starting fresh would also make this transition significantly easier using modern equipment that doesn't have 7 years of garbage on it.
So I'm thinking easy, 3 computers, 15 hours of labor or so, some networking equipment, badabing done easy.
They say that they want me to send a couple of estimates.
1.) Replacing everything and following the plan above.
Then I get hit with the, well we are tired of our server dying in the middle of the night and we are tired of how poorly our computers are running BUT
2.) Follow the above plan but we are going to cheap out and we don't want to buy new equipment we want you to make this whole new cloud system work for us with our 7 year old computers.
I explained how bad of an idea that was, they said, yes we know but we just don't want to spend the money on the new computers and they just want pricing for both.
These systems all originally had Windows 7 on them and were upgraded to Windows 10.
The more I think about quoting the two options the more I'm thinking ... I just don't even want to do this if they are going to force me into a position to rebuild their whole system using 7 year old hardware. I just can't even imagine them being ticked off because XY or Z isn't there or moved or isn't working like it used to, and me being ticked off because I never wanted to do this shotty job in the first place.
How do you all handle something like this?
I'm thinking I'm just going to say that until they are ready to do the whole thing I'm not going to try and force a new system on computers that are approaching a decade old.
The server and their workstations are now 7 years old and starting to have some significant issues. The server is shutting itself off at night and not turning back on so they come in and nothing is working 2-3 days a week. Desktops are glitching out due to 7 years of crap on them. Network hardware is in desperate need of an upgrade, typical stuff that happens over 7 years.
I explain to them that the next move would be a significant push into the cloud which would include new computers.
- The server would be removed entirely and not replaced. It holds a legacy database which is only being used to reference old data. No new data is being added, and there is no need for it to be shared anymore. So this database/program could be loaded onto a workstation.
- Server also hosts a local 1-user Quickbooks Desktop database that would be moved to a hosted option
- Folder redirection would be removed in favor of OneDrive backup
- DHCP/DNS would be redirected back to the network appliance
- Their main data is in Dropbox, mainly because they prefer it and changing their workflow to SP/Teams simply isn't worth the hassle
- They have downsized from 5 workstations down to 3.
So I explain this, and say it would be simple to just bring in 3 new desktops start with a clean slate, and give everything a clean a refreshed start. Starting fresh would also make this transition significantly easier using modern equipment that doesn't have 7 years of garbage on it.
So I'm thinking easy, 3 computers, 15 hours of labor or so, some networking equipment, badabing done easy.
They say that they want me to send a couple of estimates.
1.) Replacing everything and following the plan above.
Then I get hit with the, well we are tired of our server dying in the middle of the night and we are tired of how poorly our computers are running BUT
2.) Follow the above plan but we are going to cheap out and we don't want to buy new equipment we want you to make this whole new cloud system work for us with our 7 year old computers.
I explained how bad of an idea that was, they said, yes we know but we just don't want to spend the money on the new computers and they just want pricing for both.
These systems all originally had Windows 7 on them and were upgraded to Windows 10.
The more I think about quoting the two options the more I'm thinking ... I just don't even want to do this if they are going to force me into a position to rebuild their whole system using 7 year old hardware. I just can't even imagine them being ticked off because XY or Z isn't there or moved or isn't working like it used to, and me being ticked off because I never wanted to do this shotty job in the first place.
How do you all handle something like this?
I'm thinking I'm just going to say that until they are ready to do the whole thing I'm not going to try and force a new system on computers that are approaching a decade old.
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