From Daily Moments to Day Jobs: Why Everyone Needs Smarter Data Storage

By the time you've had your morning coffee, humanity has produced more data in one day than it did across entire centuries. And tomorrow we'll do it again.

Data now touches everything—from the beautiful to the boring; from wedding photos and magical sunsets to grocery lists and tracking a best mile run. The same is true in business. Data underpins how we share ideas, connect with customers, and deliver services around the world.

With data becoming woven into nearly every aspect of modern life, data storage has quietly shifted from a passive utility to an essential enabler, shaping much of how we live and work.

Storage is for everyone

Christina Garza, Director of Global Brand Management for Consumer Products at Sandisk, says consumers have hit a major crossroads.

“Content creation used to be something limited to photographers, designers, or tech enthusiasts,” Garza said. “But now we're all creating content every single day with everything we do. And that explosion has created a mass need for more personal storage.”

Anyone who has had the “Insufficient Storage Available” warning pop up at the worst possible moment knows exactly what Garza is talking about. And it highlights a simple truth: storage is no longer just a tech issue; it's both personal and universal.

In her role, Garza is focused on ensuring consumers have solutions for everything from freeing up storage on their phones to running their businesses. It's about bridging the gap between what Sandisk can build and what consumers need.

“What people need first and foremost is capacity ‐ space to hold more, regardless of what kind of user they are,” Garza said. “But what we're seeing increasingly is that people want their data with them. Consumers are leaning into privacy and ownership. They're facing subscription fatigue, and they want instant access to their content, especially those working with large video and image files.”

Garza's point becomes even clearer for those driving new professions in the content boom: content creators whose work hinges on fast, reliable access to enormous files.

Inside a Creator's Workflow

Mitch Newsham, a full-time content creator, knows this very well. The former teacher turned YouTuber runs Handicap Golf, a fast-growing channel where he reviews projectors, launch monitors, and DIY setups for home virtual golf studios.

“My storage needs are massive,” Newsham said. “For the holiday season, I'm publishing twice weekly to help gift-givers make better decisions. Part of the journey of becoming a full-time content creator is having had to drastically improve my technical knowledge and setup to support my ideas and revenue streams.”

Newsham never planned to become a full-time YouTuber. His journey began with a love for golf and a DIY simulator project in his garage. When he couldn't find tutorials, he started making his own.

Over six years, those early videos evolved from a hobby into a serious pursuit. Newsham recently left his 16-year teaching position to create content full-time.

“Storage is at the heart of enabling my business,” he said. “If something funny or unexpected happens while I'm testing a product or playing a round of golf—which it often does—I want to capture that moment. My camera is always rolling, and I want to keep all that b-roll for future videos.”

His current setup involves phone-to-laptop transfers augmented by a Sandisk external SSD ‐ a system that gives him the flexibility for capacity and speed.

“Editing is the most painful part,” Newsham admitted. “The faster I can transfer files, the faster I can get up and running and focus on creating more content for my audience.”

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Rewiring the Trades

The ripple effects of data on our professional world aren't limited to the realms of content creation; they are flowing straight into the essential trades.

“Even in plumbing, data storage has become essential,” Marion Tucker, Master Plumber and Owner of MET Plumbing, said.

Running a family-owned business in Texas, Tucker found a distinct advantage in blending traditional craftsmanship with modern technology. Where his team once relied on paper notes and memory, they now capture and store high-resolution images and diagnostic files that can be accessed instantly.

“We document everything from installation photos and pipe layouts to service histories and water pressure readings,” he said. “This helps with accuracy, warranties, and safety.”

It's also transforming customer relationships. MET Plumbing recently began saving video footage from camera inspections, giving homeowners a view of what's happening inside their pipes. Instead of vague descriptions or blind trust, customers can see the root of the problem for themselves, helping to build trust and transparency.

“Having reliable, portable storage isn't a luxury anymore,” Tucker said. “It's how we maintain efficiency in a trade that's become increasingly data-driven.”

In the Production Studio

For creative studios, storage has always mattered. But the scale and complexity today can be overwhelming.

“When we started our production company, we'd film on tapes; storage was basically just a box of used tapes on a shelf,” Ryan Stone, the Creative Director of award-winning video production and animation studio Lambda Films, said.

Now, storage touches every step of Lambda Films' workflow.

“In a day's filming, we could be generating hundreds of gigabytes per hour,” he said. “We film with cinema-grade RED and ARRI cameras at 4K, 6K, and even 8K resolution. Add to that sound recorder audio files, drone footage, and even client-supplied content that comes into the mix. We're generating (and moving) a ridiculous amount of data daily, and it all needs to be fast, reliable, and portable.”

A recent and major change for Lambda Films has been adding an Imaging Technician (DIT) on set—someone dedicated to ingesting the filmed material and distributing it across multiple devices.

“Portable storage is really, really important for us,” Stone said. “If we forget one of those SSDs and a laptop gets filled up, we're in a precarious situation. You want as much creative freedom to capture what you need, and you need to know your data is safeguarded no matter what.”

Back in the studio, the team tackles editing, grading, and visual effects, further pushing storage demands. Editors need lightning-fast shared access to massive files and terabytes of data, while generating more versions and formats for client delivery.

“Storage is what keeps the whole machine running,” Stone said. “We need a setup that just works—no bottlenecks, no risk.”

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At the Heart of Change

For Garza at Sandisk, it's a challenging and exciting time of opportunity.

“Sandisk has been in the business of building storage for a very long time,” Garza said. “But what's changing is that we're moving from building storage for professionals and savvy creators to building storage for everyone.”

That vision is already taking shape. For everyday consumers, Sandisk's phone drives have become game-changers for freeing up space instantly. For creators and professionals, the focus remains on robust, high-performance features they trust and need.

“Whether you're a photographer, a traveling business professional, or someone who simply loves capturing life. No matter what you do, we have products to help,” Garza explains. “As storage becomes universal, our priority is clear: put the consumer at the forefront and help them hold more of what matters most.”

Author

Ronni Shendar

January 28, 2026

[6 min read]

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