The storage market is no longer a “set it and forget it” environment. Pricing volatility, shortened quote windows, supply chain pressure, and AI driven demand are fundamentally changing how organizations must plan, purchase, and govern storage infrastructure.

In our February webinar, Quadbridge technical experts Brad Holloway, Data Centre, Pre-sales Architect and Terry Rebstein, Enterprise Solutions Architect, unpacked what’s happening beneath the surface and, more importantly, how IT leaders can respond with clarity rather than hesitation.

Two themes stood out clearly:

  1. A practical 90-day action plan to regain control
  2. Financing strategies that allow organizations to move forward without waiting for “perfect” budget conditions

What follows is a distilled, action oriented perspective designed to help you make confident decisions in an uncertain storage market.

The Hidden Cost of waiting, Don’t Delay Making a Decision

One of the clearest messages from the session was that indecision now carries real cost.

Storage pricing is changing week to week. Quote validity has compressed from 30–60 days to as little as 14 days, while lead times for memory and disk can stretch 90–100 days. Supply and demand pressure, driven largely by AI infrastructure consumption, means future pricing is increasingly unpredictable, with analyst expectations pointing to continued upward pressure

Against that backdrop, the question becomes less about whether to act, and more about how to act intelligently.

The 90 Day Storage Playbook: What to Do First

When asked what organizations should prioritize over the next 90 days, Brad Holloway was clear: start with visibility, not procurement.

1. Run a Holistic Storage Assessment

The fastest way to unlock optionality is understanding what you already have.

The webinar emphasized assessing:

  • On prem data
  • Cloud and SaaS hosted data
  • Backup and disaster recovery footprints
  • Performance vs. capacity utilization across tiers

In many cases, organizations believe they are “out of storage” when in reality they are misusing premium storage for low value workloads or over retaining backups beyond business requirements.

This step alone can uncover 30–40% reclaimable capacity, sometimes eliminating or deferring an immediate purchase altogether.

2. Align Backup and Retention to Business Risk

Backup and DR inflation emerged as one of the most common hidden cost drivers.

Cybersecurity fear driven retention policies often result in:

  • Too many copies
  • Too much storage consumed
  • Not enough alignment to actual recovery objectives

The recommendation: define acceptable business risk first, then align retention, tiering, and storage class accordingly. This frequently creates quick wins without increasing exposure.

3. Implement Tiered Storage Intentionally

Break storage into tiers:

  • Hot storage for transactional, production workloads
  • Warm storage for file services, backups, and internal data
  • Cold storage for long term retention and compliance

This tiered approach allows organizations to reserve premium performance where it truly matters while dramatically reducing cost per GB elsewhere

4. Act Earlier to Spend Less

A recurring theme throughout the discussion was urgency without panic.

If storage modernization is expected this year, especially where hardware is approaching end of life, the guidance was to make purchasing decisions in Q1 or Q2, rather than gambling on improved conditions later in the year.

Which leads to the next critical question: what if the budget isn’t ready?

Financing Strategies That Remove the “Wait” Button

One of the most practical parts of the webinar focused on financial design specifically how organizations can move forward without absorbing the full cost upfront.

Vendor Financing: Blending CapEx and Flexibility

Hardware vendor financing allows organizations to:

  • Capitalize servers or software traditionally
  • Finance storage components separately
  • Spread costs into predictable monthly payments

This approach enables earlier action while preserving cash flow, especially when storage alone threatens to consume the entire project budget.

Private Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS)

For organizations attracted to cloud like consumption models but constrained by compliance or data residency, private IaaS storage offers:

  • Dedicated on prem storage
  • No multi tenancy
  • OPEX style consumption
  • Greater financial predictability

It combines control with flexibilit – without public cloud compliance concerns.