Vol. 75, No. 6, June
2002
Save Money on Hardware and Software Using "Smart Leasing" to Buy New
Technology
Leasing companies that specialize in technology
and equipment leasing can save law firms money over the life of the
lease and when the lease term ends.
Ross L.
Kodner, rkodner@microlaw.com, is a lawyer
and founder of Milwaukee's MicroLaw Inc., a legal technology consultancy
and systems integrator. He chairs the ABA Law Practice Management
Section's Computer & Technology Division and was a member of the ABA
Techshow Executive Board from 1997-2001. He is chair of the 2002
Wisconsin Law & Technology Show.
by Ross L. Kodner
Every law firm is utterly frustrated by short product life cycles and
fast product obsolescence. Using a clever combination of leases and
purchases to acquire new hardware and software upgrades may be a way to
combat this.
Forget about traditional leasing. For example, those ads on the backs
of PC Magazine touting"only $90/month" for leases of the
perfect Dell or Gateway PC configuration would seem to be "sucker
leases" - high interest leases that are cash/profit cows for these
companies. Today, dedicated technology lessors offer interest rates that
are often below prime rate - in other words, cheaper than money.
Most banks are equally clueless about technology leasing. Banks all
seem to offer $1 buyout "leases" that, if audited, the IRS likely would
reclassify as "installment purchases." You would be penalized, not to
mention having to re-do the "lease" on your books as a
capitalized/depreciated fixed asset purchase.
Finding the Right Technology Lessor
Use leasing companies that specialize in technology and equipment
leasing. The difference comes mostly from their experience in lease-end
disposal of systems. They typically have connections to brokers who buy
the turned-in components at the end of leases. The brokers in turn sell
the components to third world countries, where a Pentium 166 may very
well still be considered hot stuff. Because the lessor makes money at
the end in sales to brokers, there is less need to make lots of money on
the initial lease. The net result is a combination of a higher buyout
amount offered (as much as 10 to 15 percent fair market value buyouts
are not unusual), which translates to lower payments during the lease
term. This translates to lower total cash outlays than if you were to
purchase the equipment and, in most cases, if you were to finance the
purchase out of your cash flow or by borrowing on your business line of
credit.
Another plus is that the more than nominal buyout amount at the end
of the lease term may properly act as a barrier to purchasing lease-end
components. This is a good thing, since after the lease term (if the
term matched the product's predicted obsolescence period) you don't want
the products. Why? Because they're obsolete. This helps law firms work
their way out of a common trap. They often buy out equipment at the end
of a lease because it's so cheap. The problem is that "cheap" is a
relative term that typically has an inverse relationship to the firm's
productivity derived from using these systems. A three-year-old PC might
be bought out for $100. Some bargain. If the software mix has been kept
current, that once swift-feeling three-year-old PC is a boat anchor that
will slow down your busy users and require more support to deal with the
inevitable problems. It's also out of warranty, so any problems
requiring repair are going to be on your nickel.
The key to cost-effective technology leasing is looking at the mix of
hardware and software products you are acquiring and structuring a
"layered" acquisition. More on this in a future column.
Wisconsin
Lawyer