Computer Donations

What CFOs Get Wrong About IT Asset Disposition and What It Costs Them

Republished from itaddaily

ITAD, or IT asset disposition, is an important part of a corporation, but many CFOs downplay its importance. It’s often treated as a basic disposal task, but it’s much more impactful and important than your typical disposal process. There are hidden costs, compliance risks, and missed financial opportunities that CFOs just aren’t seeing. These issues can arise if the importance of the ITAD role is not recognized and thus not prioritized. We’re going to look at what CFOs get wrong about IT asset disposition and what it costs them in the long run. 

What is IT Asset Disposition? 

ITAD is not just about disposing of old computers; it’s about wiping data and ensuring the security of devices that are no longer in use. There are a few key components of the ITAD process, including data destruction, asset tracking, resale, and recycling. Each stage helps to clear the device and prepare it for its specific disposal method. ITAD is an essential component of a corporation, supporting data security, legal compliance, and financial recovery, ultimately benefiting the business. Having a well-thought-out ITAD plan is important to ensure your business handles ITAD properly and avoids data breaches, fines, and legal trouble. 

What CFOs Get Wrong About IT Asset Disposition

CFOs often misunderstand IT asset disposition and its importance to the business. Many think that it’s just another regular disposal practice, it doesn’t need to be monitored, and there aren’t any risks associated with it. Here’s a look at what CFOs get wrong about IT asset disposition and what it costs them:

Treating ITAD Just as an Expense 

Many Chief Finance Officers view ITAD as just another expense on their books, but it’s more important and complex than that. These assets often have resale value, and they need to be properly wiped, not just thrown in the trash. Many corporations use hundreds of electronic devices that will need to go through an ITAD process, and there is revenue to be made from the reuse and resale process as well. 

Not Taking Data Security Risks Seriously 

Data security risks are among the most important, if not the most important, reasons why ITAD practices should be put in place. Many CFOs think that basic wiping practices will be enough, but that’s not the case. There are strict destruction and wiping processes for ITAD devices that should be followed to minimize data security risks. Without proper wiping processes, data can be recovered from devices,s which can lead to data breaches, penalties, and damage to the company’s reputation. 

Inefficient Tracking and Documentation

The process through which these unused devices go through must be tracked and documented so that it’s known where the devices are and how they were disposed of. For audits and compliance, proof of proper handling is required, and that’s where the documentation comes in. If the cycle of these assets isn’t properly documented, this could lead to audit failure, fines, and operational confusion. 

Vendor Selection 

Price can be a factor when choosing a vendor, but it shouldn’t be the deciding factor. Selecting a vendor should be a detailed process in which the vendor’s experience and credentials are evaluated, rather than focusing on which vendor offers the better price. Cheap work isn’t always the best work, and in ITAD processes, it is crucial to ensure the work is accurate. 

Ignoring Compliance Standards 

Compliance standards and regulations, such as GDPR, HIPAA, and local e-waste regulations, are in place to protect e-waste and data. If you’re not following the compliance standards and regulations in place, you may face fines, loss of certifications, and legal issues. 

Not Putting ITAD into Financial Plan 

Many CFOs don’t include the ITAD budget in the financial plan, which can lead to insufficient allocation for that category. It should be funded efficiently to ensure adequate resources for a proper IT asset disposition plan. Failing to incorporate it into the financial plan can result in missed forecasting opportunities and inefficient capital allocation, leading to inadequate funding for ITAD. 

How Should CFOs Approach ITAD?

Recognizing these misconceptions can help you better prepare for an ITAD plan that is efficient and compliant. Here are some of our top tips for how Chief Finance Officers should approach IT asset disposition: 

Treat it as a Value Recovery Strategy. 

You can build out processes to recover value from retired assets, and partner with vendors that offer resale. 

Prioritize Data Destruction 

CFOs should require industry-standard methods, such as certified wiping or shredding, to ensure data is properly destroyed. You should also demand proof of the destruction for verification purposes. 

Implement Asset Tracking 

Having strong asset-tracking systems can help you maintain the required detailed records from the point of purchase through the disposal process. There are many asset management software available that can expedite this process. 

Choose Vendors Diligently 

Make sure to look for certifications, references, security and compliance practices, and the overall track record of vendors before awarding contracts to them. These ITAD partners must be knowledgeable, honest, and compliant in IT asset disposition. 

Stay in the Know on Regulations

Stay aware of regulations so you can make any necessary changes before they take effect. Make sure to add compliance factors into the contracts and processes. 

Act Quickly 

Dispose of or resell the assets quickly to avoid a stockpile that can be overwhelming, as well as a missed revenue opportunity. Staying on top of the ITAD process can make record-keeping, management, and security much easier. 

Integrate ITAD into Financial Planning 

Allocating an appropriate budget to ITAD is important for maintaining sound practices and ensuring sufficient resources to carry out the process correctly and securely. 

Add ITAD to Your Company’s Financial Plan 

As a CFO or other financial decision-maker, it’s crucial to include ITAD in your financial plan. Many forget about this and don’t allocate enough revenue to this category, leaving no room for proper disposal and security. Maintaining proper processes is essential for gaining resale revenue, preventing data breaches, and staying compliant. Take our tips and start planning for IT asset disposition today so your company stays compliant, recoups missed revenue, and is better prepared for an efficient process.

American e-waste is causing a 'hidden tsunami' in Southeast Asia, watchdog report says

ANIRUDDHA GHOSAL Associated Press

HANOI, Vietnam — Millions of tons of discarded electronics from the United States are being shipped overseas, much of it to developing countries in Southeast Asia unprepared to safely handle hazardous waste, according to a new report by an environmental watchdog.

The Seattle-based Basel Action Network, or BAN, said last week that a two-year investigation found at least 10 U.S. companies exporting used electronics to Asia and the Middle East, in what it says is a "hidden tsunami" of electronic waste.

"This new, almost invisible tsunami of e-waste, is taking place ... padding already lucrative profit margins of the electronics recycling sector while allowing a major portion of the American public's and corporate IT equipment to be surreptitiously exported to and processed under harmful conditions in Southeast Asia," the report said. READ MORE…

10 strong reasons why corporations should recycle their laptops responsibly

Funny, ChatGPT comes up with the same reasons we’ve been providing for 14 years:

1. Protecting Sensitive Data

Secure recycling ensures all hard drives are properly wiped or destroyed, preventing costly data breaches, identity theft, or compliance violations (HIPAA, GDPR, etc.).

2. Regulatory Compliance

Many states and countries have e-waste laws. Proper recycling keeps corporations in compliance, avoiding fines, audits, and legal exposure.

3. Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)

Demonstrating commitment to sustainability builds goodwill with employees, customers, and communities. Responsible laptop recycling is a visible, measurable CSR action.

4. Environmental Stewardship

Recycling prevents toxic materials like lead, cadmium, and mercury from entering landfills or water supplies, while reclaiming valuable resources such as gold, copper, and aluminum.

5. Cost Savings & Tax Incentives

Certified recycling can reduce storage and disposal costs, while donations to nonprofits or schools may qualify for tax deductions.

6. Brand Reputation & ESG Metrics

Investors, customers, and partners increasingly evaluate companies based on environmental, social, and governance (ESG) performance. Responsible recycling strengthens sustainability reporting.

7. Employee Engagement

Eco-friendly initiatives resonate with today’s workforce. Recycling programs can be tied to employee volunteer opportunities or company culture, boosting retention and morale.

8. Circular Economy Participation

Proper recycling keeps equipment and components in circulation—whether refurbished for resale or reused for parts—reducing demand for new resource extraction.

9. Freeing Up Valuable Space

Storing old laptops is costly and inefficient. Recycling clears space in offices, warehouses, and IT closets for productive use.

10. Future-Proofing Business Practices

Sustainability is becoming a baseline expectation. Companies that adopt responsible recycling now are better prepared for future regulations, customer demands, and global sustainability trends.

When you google computer recycling near me, Triangle Ecycling is the first to come up in natural search. There’s a reason. We have been securely picking up, destroying data and refurbishing and recycling laptops for 14 years. We recycle over 150 tons of ewaste every year. We donate hundreds of computers and provide dozens of high school internships every year. We also donate 20% of our profits to local nonprofits and support our public schools. Join us in doing the right thing.

Not just e-waste: Why ITAD is the unsung hero of the circular economy

ITAD empowers circularity by extending IT asset lifecycles, ensuring secure disposal, reducing e-waste, and enabling affordable tech access.

by Abhishek Agashe, Co-founder & CEO at Elima
In the global push toward sustainability, conversations around the circular economy often focus on recycling, composting, or sustainable product design. Yet, there is very little discussion about refurbishment and remanufacturing, which ultimately increase the lifespan of products, thus powering circularity in the true sense.

Every enterprise, MSME’s and individuals today are powered by IT assets such as laptops, servers, desktops, networking, and more. These assets have a first lifecycle, and what happens at the end of that lifecycle is critical. Most people think of “e-waste” as the final chapter, but the story doesn’t end there.

According to a report by the United Nations, 53.6 million metric tons of e-waste were generated worldwide in 2019, with only 17.4% being recycled. This underscores the urgent need for businesses to adopt sustainable ITAD practices that align with ESG principles.

Another transformative impact of ITAD lies in its ability to democratise access to technology — a change that’s unfolding across India and the world. By recovering, refurbishing, and reintroducing high-quality IT assets into the market at a fraction of their original cost, ITAD makes laptops, desktops, and servers affordable for MSMEs, students, individual entrepreneurs, and small institutions. LEARN MORE…

Made with stuff that doesn’t belong in the ocean.

Made from Ocean Waste

With NetPlus® and ECONYL® recycled nylon, we’re turning discarded fishing nets—one of the most harmful forms of plastic pollution—into something you can wear again and again.

Patagonia, the most amazing company in the world, never fails to surprise you with ways it invents to protect our HOME PLANET. Learn More…

Triangle Ecycling to Sponsor 46th annual Festival for the Eno

We’re excited to announce the 46th annual Festival for the Eno. Immerse yourself with live music, a juried craft show, food, and fun on the river. Tickets are on sale now. Don’t miss our amazing lineup of musicians headlined by Dom Flemons, Empire Strikes Brass, Dr. Bacon, and Shirlette Ammons!

READ MORE AND BUY TICKETS

The Eno River Association

The Eno River Association is a non-profit, tax-exempt organization founded in 1966 with a mission to protect the natural, cultural and historic resources of the Eno River basin in northern Durham and Orange counties.

The Association has protected over 7,800 acres of natural and working lands and has helped create five local, state, and regional nature parks, including Eno River State Park, Occoneechee Mountain State Natural Area, West Point on the Eno City Park, Penny’s Bend Nature Preserve, and Little River Regional Park. The Association continues to acquire land and secure easements, as well as provide stewardship, education programs, and the annual Festival on the Eno to inspire others to prioritize our local, natural resources. 

Amazing Deals on Refurbished Corporate Laptops

Visit Triangle Ecycling’s eBay store for deeply discounted prices on refurbished corporate laptops from Dell, Lenovo, HP and more. Also find deals on desktop computers, RAM, hard drives and lots of other electronic equipment.

Pharma giant picks surging Wake County town for 420-job, $700M facility

By David Purtell and Zac Ezzone – Triangle Business Journal

May 12, 2025

Updated May 12, 2025 11:50am EDT

A global biotech company is eyeing Wake County for a production facility that would create more than 400 jobs.

Genentech, a subsidiary of Swiss multinational health care company Roche Holding AG, wants to put a new facility in Holly Springs, representing a total investment of $700 million. The company plans to create 420 jobs with an average minimum wage of nearly $120,000.

Genentech, based in San Francisco, on Monday morning was approved for state incentives totaling more than $13 million. The company is also in line for local incentives totaling more than $33 million.

The Holly Springs plant will be the company's first production facility on the East Coast. The 700,000-square-foot high volume fill-finish facility will support Genentech's existing portfolio and future obesity medicines. Genentech focuses on drug discovery and development to treat serious and life-threatening diseases.

The company, with around 12,000 employees, is expected to create the jobs over five years from 2028 to 2032. Genentech also has facilities in Southern California, Oregon and Louisville, Kentucky.

Read More…

TRIANGLE ECYCLING PICKS UP COMPUTERS FOR RECYCLING FROM ALL BIOTECH AND PHARMA COMPANIES IN HOLLY SPRINGS, NC

Triangle Ecycling Celebrated Earth Day by Ecycling Thousands of Pounds of Ewaste

Triangle Ecycling helped several of our corporate clients in RTP, Downtown Durham, Raleigh, Morrisville and Apex with employee ewaste recycling events in honor of Earth Day.

We are pleased to have been asked for our support in planning, marketing and picking up the computers, peripherals and other equipment collected from the companies and their employees.

Triangle Ecycling is a Durham-based nonprofit, our mission is to help make our community smarter, cleaner and more equitable. We do this by providing free tech education and electronics recycling services and by donating computers to nonprofits and public school students in need. We have educated more than 170 high school interns. We recycled over 150 tons of ewaste in 2024 and donated more than 500 computers. 

We provide secure pickup and transport with our own team in the Mid-Atlantic region and nationwide with our trusted IT logistics partner. Once received in our shop, all hard drives are pulled from computers and data securely destroyed. We provide a Serialized Inventory and Certificate of Destruction. Our service provides a way for businesses and organizations to support sustainability and give back to their community at no cost to them.

Canada, Mexico tariffs poised to disrupt recycling sector

by Colin Staub for eScrap News

The Recycled Materials Association warned of potential “severe” disruption to the materials recovery sector after tariffs targeting the U.S.’s largest trading partners took effect this week. Some tariffs on Mexican imports were paused for another month on March 6. Meanwhile, Canada’s proposed response includes tariffs on U.S. exports of recycled materials.

READ MORE…

The Story You’ve Been Told About Recycling Is a Lie

By Alexander Clapp

Mr. Clapp is a journalist and the author of “Waste Wars: The Wild Afterlife of Your Trash,” from which this essay is adapted. From the New York Times

In the closing years of the Cold War, something strange started to happen.

Much of the West’s trash stopped heading to the nearest landfill and instead started crossing national borders and traversing oceans. The stuff people tossed away and probably never thought about again — dirty yogurt cups, old Coke bottles — became some of the most redistributed objects on the planet, typically winding up thousands of miles away. It was a bewildering process, one that began with the export of toxic industrial waste. By the late 1980s, thousands of tons of hazardous chemicals had left the United States and Europe for the ravines of Africa, the beaches of the Caribbean and the swamps of Latin America.

READ MORE…

How proper e-waste management can financially benefit your company

By Colin Williamson

From ESG milestones to significant cost savings, the business benefits of tech regeneration are something every company in South Africa needs to be prioritising. At this moment, companies across the country have old laptops, phones and other tech assets that have been sitting in drawers and storerooms for years. When the time comes to address this issue, companies often incur additional costs for destruction or inefficient recycling, and in some cases, improper disposal.

In all cases, the asset value is a write-off and depending on how often companies refresh their tech, this is an ongoing expense and logistical problem. It’s time South African businesses adopt a circular mindset and realise that there is a better way to handle ageing tech and e-waste that has tangible financial benefits alongside environmental ones. READ MORE…

Rising Demand for ITAD Services in the Years to Come

Equity firm acquires majority stake in Sprout

Published: January 9, 2025
Updated: January 9, 2025
by Colin Staub

IT asset disposition company Sprout has received a majority investment from a New York City-based private equity firm, which predicts rising demand for ITAD services in the years to come.

Sprout and the equity firm, Recognize, today announced the deal, which closed in late December. They noted that current Sprout investor New Capital Partners, which has owned a stake in the company since 2019, will continue on as a minority investor. Financial terms of the deal weren’t disclosed.

“Ultimately, this partnership with Recognized is going to enable Sprout to scale our impact on sustainability and secure data management,” Tom Allison, president of Sprout, said in an interview. “This partnership is helping us respond to the growing global demand for what I call sophisticated ITAD solutions.”

READ MORE…

Windows 10 Support From Microsoft Ends This Year

How to prepare for Windows 10 end of support by moving to Windows 11 today

By

As we approach the end of support for Windows 10 on Oct. 14, 20251, we want to ensure you are well-prepared for the transition to Windows 11. This milestone marks an important step in our mission to provide the most modern and secure computing experience possible for everyone whether at work, school, or home, and our commitment to continually improving Windows security as part of Microsoft’s Secure Future Initiative (SFI). We are incredibly grateful for your loyalty and passion for Windows 10, and we are working hard to make it easy to move to Windows 11.

This blog post is intended to help you prepare for Windows 10 end of support by outlining considerations for moving to Windows 11 today. Including:

Learn More…

A $60 Billion-a-Year Climate Solution Is Sitting in Our Junk Drawers

In rich nations, just a fraction of trashed electronics is mined for critical metals. We’re going to have to up our game.

By Vince Beiser; Photography by Oyewole Lawal - Mother Jones

Thousands of Nigerians make a meager living recycling e-waste, a broad category that can consist of just about any discarded item with a plug or a battery. This includes the computers, phones, game controllers, and other digital devices that we use and ditch in ever-growing volumes. The world generates more than 68 million tons of e-waste every year, according to the UN, enough to fill a convoy of trucks stretching right around the equator. By 2030, the total is projected to reach 75 million tons. READ MORE….

Windows 11 Installation Assistant

Time to upgrade to Windows 11. If your computer can’t handle it, please come in to Triangle Ecycling.

There are 3 options below for installing or creating Windows 11 media. Check out each one to determine the best option for you.

Before installing, please refer to the PC Health Check app to confirm your device meets the minimum system requirements for
Windows 11 and check the Windows release information status for known issues that may affect your device.

Download Here

World U.K. Royal Mint starts extracting gold from e-waste: "What we're doing here is urban mining"

Haley Ott

Updated on: August 7, 2024 / 12:58 PM EDT / CBS News

London - The U.K.'s Royal Mint, the country's official coinmaker, has opened a factory that will extract gold from e-waste to reduce its reliance on traditional mining and encourage more sustainable practices.

"The factory underpins our commitment to using sustainable precious metals and providing a new source of high quality, recovered gold," Sean Millard, Chief Growth Officer at The Royal Mint, said in a statement. "It allows us to reduce our reliance on mined materials and is another example of how we're working to decarbonise our operations." MORE…

Pretty funny - It takes the gold of more than 100 sticks of ram to make a coin the size of a penny.

Decades of public messages about recycling in the US have crowded out more sustainable ways to manage waste

Michaela Barnett, University of Virginia; Leidy Klotz, University of Virginia; Patrick I. Hancock, University of Virginia, and Shahzeen Attari, Indiana University

Sun, July 28, 2024 at 10:06 AM EDT

In our research on waste behavior, sustainability, engineering design and decision making, we examine what U.S. residents understand about the efficacy of different waste management strategies and which of those strategies they prefer. In two nationwide surveys in the U.S. that we conducted in October 2019 and March 2022, we found that people overlook waste reduction and reuse in favor of recycling. We call this tendency recycling bias and reduction neglect. Read More…