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budget forecasting
About this tag
Budget forecasting in enterprise IT often involves modeling the costs of legacy OS support versus migration. A recurring theme in WindowsForum.com discussions is the financial analysis of Windows 10 Extended Security Updates (ESU), where IT leaders weigh per-device licensing fees against the expenses of system upgrades, application compatibility testing, and operational disruptions. Practical guides examine how to build accurate cost models that account for hardware refresh cycles, software assurance, and containment strategies. These threads help IT professionals project multi-year budgets, compare total cost of ownership between staying on extended support and migrating to newer platforms, and communicate financial trade-offs to stakeholders. The tag covers real-world examples of calculating ESU bills, estimating migration labor, and identifying hidden costs in enterprise Windows environments.
Nexthink’s warning that “sticking with Windows 10 could cost businesses billions” captured headlines for a reason: a simple arithmetic model — 121 million Windows 10 PCs multiplied by an enterprise Extended Security Update (ESU) list price of $61 per device — produces a first‑year bill in the...