The businesses running the most resilient operations share habits that are easy to overlook. The first is that they decide once. When they settle on MFA for every user, a laptop refresh cycle, a standard M365 tier, they commit and move on. They stop relitigating the same choices every six months. The second is that they invest in their least-technical staff, not just the IT-adjacent ones. The receptionist gets trained on spotting phishing. The accounts person learns the shortcuts that save ninety minutes a day. The senior team actually uses Copilot, because someone sat with them for an hour. The third is financial discipline. They budget for IT the way they budget for insurance: as a planned, predictable cost that keeps the lights on, not something to rescue in an emergency.
The pattern underneath all three is the same. Good IT is quiet. It's decisions made thoughtfully and then left alone. It's money spent steadily, not reactively. It's people who know what they're doing because someone took the time to teach them. None of it is dramatic, and that's the point. The clients running the best operations in 2026 aren't doing anything flashy. They're doing the boring things consistently, and watching their competitors burn energy on problems they solved years ago.
