Time is running out, and honestly, that's putting it mildly. With Microsoft pulling the plug on Windows 10 support come October 14, 2025, Central Virginia businesses are staring down a decision that's about way more than just upgrading computers. The real question? Whether you can afford to keep putting this off.
Here at ProActive Information Management (PIM), our Fractional Risk Officers have been crunching numbers with local businesses to figure out what delaying migration actually costs. What we found might make you rethink that "we'll deal with it later" approach: waiting typically costs 10 times more than just getting it done now.
When Windows 10 loses Microsoft's backing in October 2025, you're not just missing out on shiny new features. You're losing the security blanket that keeps your business from bleeding money. No more security updates means known vulnerabilities stay broken forever.
Let me paint you a picture from a recent risk assessment we did: A 50-employee manufacturing company in Richmond thought they'd save $75,000 by putting off their Windows 10 migration. Smart financial move, right? Wrong. Six months later, a cybercriminal exploited an unpatched Windows 10 hole, and here's what it cost them:
Total damage: $695,000 - more than nine times what they "saved" by waiting.
For Virginia businesses dealing with regulations, delayed Windows 10 migration is like pulling the first domino in a very expensive chain reaction.
Healthcare organizations have to maintain "reasonable and appropriate" security measures - that's not negotiable. Running unsupported operating systems? That's the opposite of reasonable. We recently helped a medical practice dodge a $50,000 HIPAA penalty by getting ahead of this with:
If you're chasing CMMC certification for defense contracts, you can't prove cybersecurity maturity while running unsupported systems. The cost here isn't just the migration delay - it's losing out on federal contracts worth millions annually.
Need to process credit cards? PCI DSS compliance requires supported operating systems. After October 2025, businesses stuck on Windows 10 risk losing their ability to take payments. For most businesses, that's not a setback - that's game over.
Here's something most businesses don't see coming: when employees get frustrated with outdated systems that don't play nice with modern tools, they find workarounds. And those workarounds? They're security nightmares waiting to happen.
Our penetration testing team sees this stuff all the time:
Every single workaround creates a new way for attackers to get in. And a new liability for you.
The Central Virginia businesses winning at this aren't treating Windows 10 migration like a forced expense. They're seeing it as a strategic refresh that pays dividends. Here's what the math looks like:
The businesses succeeding here all do the same thing: they treat migration as a risk management investment, not just a technology expense.
Our penetration testing team identifies vulnerabilities in your current Windows 10 setup before migration starts. This baseline gives you:
The bottom line? October 2025 isn't that far away, and the cost of scrambling at the last minute always exceeds the investment in doing it right the first time.
Want to see what migration actually looks like for your business? Get in touch with our team. We'll help you turn this challenge into a competitive advantage.