Rising hardware costs, ongoing supply chain disruption, and memory and DRAM shortages are forcing IT leaders to stretch refresh cycles further than ever. However, those aging servers, laptops, and devices sitting in storage may be worth more than you realize.
As residual values for older data center hardware and end-user devices continue to increase, organizations have a new opportunity to offset refresh costs while maintaining security, governance, and audit readiness.
SHI’s IT asset recovery solutions are designed to help organizations turn surplus and retired hardware into tangible financial return. By combining secure recovery processes, certified data sanitization, and transparent resale workflows, our IT asset recovery experts help your IT teams capture residual value without introducing operational risk. From on-site pickup and secure shipping containers to serialized chain-of-custody reporting and NIST 800‑88–compliant data erasure, every step is built to protect both your data and reputation.
Here are some of the key benefits you’ll discover:
- Reduce refresh pressure and stretch budgets.
- Protect sensitive data with certified security.
- Improve governance by leveraging inventory reconciliation, grading, and reporting.
- Simplify logistics and operations with flexible recovery options.
- Increase transparency across the asset lifecycle.
- Gain dedicated, end-to-end support.
Simplify an often complex process with a single point of contact, inventory reconciliation across locations, and ongoing visibility into assets, value, and resale progress.
NEXT STEPS
Ready to see how secure, strategic IT asset recovery can help your organization recover value and reduce refresh pressure? Explore SHI’s end-to-end approach to IT asset recovery — reach out to one of our experts to get started today.
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PakarPBN
A Private Blog Network (PBN) is a collection of websites that are controlled by a single individual or organization and used primarily to build backlinks to a “money site” in order to influence its ranking in search engines such as Google. The core idea behind a PBN is based on the importance of backlinks in Google’s ranking algorithm. Since Google views backlinks as signals of authority and trust, some website owners attempt to artificially create these signals through a controlled network of sites.
In a typical PBN setup, the owner acquires expired or aged domains that already have existing authority, backlinks, and history. These domains are rebuilt with new content and hosted separately, often using different IP addresses, hosting providers, themes, and ownership details to make them appear unrelated. Within the content published on these sites, links are strategically placed that point to the main website the owner wants to rank higher. By doing this, the owner attempts to pass link equity (also known as “link juice”) from the PBN sites to the target website.
The purpose of a PBN is to give the impression that the target website is naturally earning links from multiple independent sources. If done effectively, this can temporarily improve keyword rankings, increase organic visibility, and drive more traffic from search results.