
The risk isn't the hardware leaving. It's not being able to prove where it went.
Most IT asset disposal still runs on ad hoc pickups and a vendor's word that the data was wiped. That isn't a process. It's a hope. The ITAD Optimal Path turns disposal into a controlled flow the organisation can stand behind. Everyone knows their role, every collection produces its own evidence, and the contract and finance model holds up when a NIS2, CSRD, ESG, or EcoVadis auditor asks where the proof came from.
WHY A CONTROLLED PATH
Three things that break without a controlled disposal flow
Most organisations already dispose of IT assets. Very few can prove how. That gap is where risk, cost, and compliance exposure quietly accumulate.
HOW WE DELIVER THIS
The ITAD Optimal Path - Five components, one managed programme
A disposal programme that runs well doesn't happen by accident. We structure every ITAD engagement across five defined components, each with a clear scope and a tangible output. The company always knows what's happening, what's been completed, and what comes next.
WHAT YOU GET
Four outcomes leadership can stand behind.
The path produces more than a completed pickup. It produces evidence, the kind compliance, finance, and sustainability teams can act on straight away, without anyone translating it first.
START HERE
Book an intro session and see where you stand.
Want your disposal to hold up under NIS2, CSRD, ESG, and EcoVadis? Book a 30-minute intro session and we'll show you how the ITAD Optimal Path fits your organisation, from the cross-border setup right through to the downstream carbon reporting.
Download the product paper
See how the five-workstream disposal flow, from localised setup and one signed contract through to the European finance model, turns every pickup into a documented chain of custody plus downstream carbon and financial reporting. The paper covers all four pressures on disposal, explains why NIS2, CSRD, ESG, and EcoVadis now judge it on proof rather than a collection receipt, and shows what the output looks like in language leadership can act on.
