
How to Make Better Technology Decisions in 2026
24 April 2026
How to find the right IT experts for your business
26 April 2026Technology advice is meant to make decisions clearer. But in many organisations, the advice itself becomes part of the problem This usually happens when guidance is unclear, biased, or disconnected from how decisions are actually made.
Understanding where technology advice goes wrong helps organisations avoid costly mistakes.
Advice That Starts With a Solution
One of the most common issues is starting with a recommended product instead of a defined need.
This often happens when advice is tied too closely to specific vendors. The focus shifts from solving a problem to fitting a solution.
Over time, this can lead to:
- Tools that don’t fully meet requirements
- Unnecessary features increasing cost
- Limited flexibility in the future
Good advice should begin with understanding the organisation, not the product.
Lack of Clear Requirements
Advice is only as strong as the information behind it.
If requirements are vague, recommendations will be too. For example, saying a team needs “better reporting” or “improved collaboration” leaves too much open to interpretation.
Clear requirements should define:
- What needs to improve
- Who will use the solution
- What success looks like
Without this, it’s difficult to assess whether advice is relevant or useful.
Overlooking Commercial Detail
Technology advice often focuses on features and functionality. While this is important, commercial terms are just as critical.
Pricing structures can vary widely between suppliers. Some costs may only appear after the first year. Others may depend on usage levels or future scaling.
Ignoring these details can lead to decisions that look good initially but become expensive over time.
Strong advice includes:
- Full cost visibility
- Clear comparison of pricing models
- Understanding of contract terms
Too Much Reliance on Supplier Input
Suppliers play an important role in explaining their solutions. However, relying too heavily on vendor input can skew decision-making.
Suppliers naturally highlight strengths and minimise limitations. This can make it difficult to see how solutions compare objectively.
Independent validation helps balance this. It ensures that decisions are based on consistent criteria rather than presentation.
Advice Without Structure
In some cases, advice is provided in a way that is difficult to act on.
This might include long reports without clear conclusions or recommendations that don’t link back to defined requirements.
Effective advice should be:
- Structured
- Easy to follow
- Focused on decision-making
The goal is not to provide more information, but to provide clarity.
A Better Approach to Technology Advice
Organisations that get the most value from technology advice tend to follow a structured approach:
- Start with clearly defined requirements
- Separate evaluation from supplier influence
- Compare options consistently
- Include commercial and contractual review
- Present findings in a clear, actionable format
This approach makes advice easier to trust and easier to act on.
Reducing complexity in the long run
Technology advice should reduce complexity, not add to it.
When advice is clear, structured, and independent, organisations are better positioned to make confident decisions.
Darwin Technology provides technology advice that focuses on clarity and objectivity. By supporting organisations with structured evaluations and commercial insight, Darwin helps turn complex decisions into clear, actionable outcomes.
