I had a conversation with a business owner a few weeks back that I keep thinking about. We were going through his monthly expenses, and when we got to software, he genuinely couldn’t tell me what half of it was for. There was a project management tool nobody had logged into since the bloke who set it up had left. A standalone video conferencing subscription, paid annually, sitting right beside the Microsoft 365 licences that already included Teams. A note-taking app the marketing person swore by, except marketing had moved on eighteen months ago.
None of these were big numbers on their own. Twelve dollars here, forty there. But added up across a year, he was handing over the cost of a part-time wage for software that was doing precisely nothing. And the part that stung wasn’t the money. It was that he had no idea it was happening.
The quiet leak nobody’s watching
Software waste doesn’t announce itself. There’s no alarm when a tool stops being used. The direct debit just keeps going, month after month, long after the person who championed it has gone or the project it supported has wrapped up. We call it shelfware, and almost every small business I look at has more of it than the owner expects.
The trouble is that nobody actually owns the question “are we still using this?” The person who signed up has moved on. Finance sees a line item but not a behaviour. And because each subscription feels small, it never quite makes it to the top of anyone’s to-do list. So it sits there, quietly compounding.
What makes it worse is duplication. You’d be amazed how often I find a business paying for a separate tool to do something Microsoft 365 already does. A third-party file-sharing service running alongside SharePoint and OneDrive. A standalone form builder when Microsoft Forms is sitting right there. A digital signature product when the basics are already covered. You’re not just paying for shelfware — you’re paying twice for the same job.
Do the audit you keep putting off
Here’s the good news: finding the waste is far easier than people assume, and you’ve already paying for the tools to do it.
Start in the Microsoft 365 admin centre. The usage reports will show you, plainly, who has signed into what and when. If you’ve got people assigned licences they haven’t touched in ninety days, that’s a conversation worth having. If you’ve got Copilot or premium licences sitting on accounts that don’t need them, that’s money you can claw back this afternoon.
Then turn Copilot loose on the question. Drop your last twelve months of software invoices into a folder and ask Copilot to pull every recurring software charge into a single list, grouped by vendor, with the annual cost beside each one. What used to be a tedious afternoon of scrolling through bank statements becomes a five-minute job. Ask it to flag anything that looks like it overlaps with a capability you already have in Microsoft 365, and you’ll have your shortlist of suspects before your coffee’s gone cold.
The point isn’t to cancel everything. Some of those subscriptions earn their keep. The point is to make a deliberate decision about each one, rather than letting inertia decide for you.
Consolidation is the real saving
Once you can see the full picture, the pattern usually becomes obvious. A handful of scattered tools, each solving one small problem, most of which the stack you already pay for could handle. Trimming the dead subscriptions feels good. But folding three overlapping tools back into Microsoft 365 is where the real money is — and you get the bonus of everything living in one place, with one login and one support number instead of five.
I’m not suggesting you rip everything out tomorrow. Specialist tools exist for good reasons, and sometimes the dedicated product genuinely is the better fit. But “we’ve always paid for it” is not a reason. Neither is “someone set it up once.”
The habit, not the one-off
The owner I mentioned trimmed his software spend by nearly a third in an afternoon. The bigger win was the habit. Now he runs the same check every quarter — a recurring task in Planner, fifteen minutes, no drama.
Your software bill is one of the few costs you can cut without touching a single person or a single customer. That’s rare. Go and have a look at what you’re actually paying for. I suspect you’ll be surprised.