A founder hires someone brilliant in another country. The offer is signed. Then the unglamorous question lands: how does this person actually get a working, secure laptop before their first day?
For most companies, the honest answer is "with difficulty, and not on time." A new hire abroad waiting two weeks for a machine is not the exception. It is the norm. Here is what it takes to make 48 hours the norm instead.
Why cross-border hardware is genuinely hard
It is worth being clear about the problem before claiming to solve it. Getting a laptop to someone in another country involves real obstacles:
- Local sourcing. The exact configuration available and reasonably priced in Spain may be different in Brazil or Japan. Shipping one machine across the world is slow, expensive, and a customs adventure.
- Customs and import. Cross-border hardware means duties, paperwork, and delays that are nobody's job until they are everybody's problem.
- Configuration. A laptop that arrives is not the same as a laptop that is ready. It still needs apps, security policies, and access set up.
- Visibility. Once an order is in motion across borders, most companies lose track of it entirely until it shows up, or does not.
Solve those four, and 48 hours stops being a slogan.
The four things that make it work
A real partner network, not a single warehouse. Speed across 150+ countries does not come from shipping everything from one hub. It comes from a network of certified local partners who can source and deliver market-appropriate hardware close to where the person actually is. Local delivery, local support, no single point of delay.
Configuration at the source. The device should be enrolled in MDM and EDR and loaded with the right apps and policies before it ships, not after it lands. The employee powers it on and it is ready and secure on first boot. No IT involvement on the other end.
Approval and ordering built in. The slow part is often not logistics, it is the back-and-forth before the order even goes out. When requests, budgets, and approvals live in one flow, the order moves the moment it is greenlit.
Real-time traceability. You should be able to see the status of every order, every device, in every country, at any moment. Not an email chain. A live view. When something needs attention, you know before it becomes a problem.
What it looks like from the inside
New hire confirmed in the system. The right machine for their role gets ordered automatically, sourced from a local partner near them, configured with the company's security profile and apps, and dispatched. It arrives in a couple of days, ready to use. They sign in once and start working. IT spent close to zero minutes on it.
Then the device lives in one inventory, tracked, compliant, visible. When the person eventually leaves, the same flow runs in reverse: access revoked, device retrieved, wiped, redeployed or retired.
The point is that you stop thinking about it
The goal here is not to make hardware logistics exciting. It is to make it disappear. A growing company should be able to hire in Barcelona, Berlin, and Bogotá in the same week, and have IT be a non-event in all three.
Equipping a global team in 48 hours is not magic. It is a network, configuration done upfront, approvals in one place, and full visibility, working together so the founder never has to think about any of it.
That is the whole idea. When it works, it is invisible. And when it is invisible, it is working.