- Bengayi Kumbula
What informs your IT hardware buying decisions?
Updated: Jan 6, 2022

Over the years, I have been fascinated by the power of marketing and how it influences our buying decisions. Take the car industry, for example. It’s perfected the art of driving consumers’ buying behaviours.
Every five years, they release a new car that draws scores of buyers. Two to three years later, they introduce a facelift of the same model, but customers who bought the then-new release a few years back do not want to be “outdated” and therefore sell their cars generally at a loss, take on new debt at higher-priced cars, and so the cycle continues.
When you ask why these consumers feel the need to change their cars so often, they come up with a laundry list of reasons, none of which makes sense economically or technically. None of them is a Formula One driver — on average they drive at 80km/h on the city roads quite happily and the full capacity of what they pay for is never utilised. But they have it, the latest and fastest! The only unhappy party in this whole arrangement is the consumer’s bank account.
I have also observed another phenomenon. When a new car is released and is showing at car dealers, scores of people queue up and flock dealer showroom floors to place their orders for new cars. I have hardly ever seen any of the top business leaders or affluent people at any of these car releases – it’s always mostly the average person, who has a mortgage, overdraft, a maxed-out credit card and who is still paying for their car. No prizes for guessing why the wealthy guys are where they are, and the other guy finds himself perpetually unable to save and is indebted. But I digress… I have nothing against new cars!
The same human beings who are on this drumbeat of exchanging cars and spending more in their personal capacities are also the same people who are in charge of making buying decisions for organisations that they work for. They bring the same paradigm they use in their personal capacities into the organisations. Put your seat belt on, it’s about to become turbulent!
Ironic?
We have just agreed that these guys are not very good at looking after their personal bank balances, and yet we trust them with hundreds of millions of budget to spend. Isn’t that ironic? What do you think they will do with money that doesn’t belong to them when the vault is opened? It’s something to think about when hiring your next executive to be in charge of large budgets!
Stay with me please, I am going somewhere with this. I will use IT hardware as an example as it has very similar characteristics to cars. How m
any CIOs, chief procurement officers and so on go out and buy millions of rand worth of IT hardware based on the latest releases in the market, some flimsy business case that is cooked to achieve a myopic objective or simply lack facts – with no regard whatsoever to cost, user needs, application and fitness for purpose? These guys can sell ice to Eskimos in the way they motivate the latest, shiniest and greatest toys on non-empirical facts or, in today’s world, “alternative facts”. They will even scare the organisation into submission based on untested assumptions. And they have their way every single time.