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Moving on and upward…

August 9th, 2010 by Blog Administrator, No Comments »

I’ve been negligent and not posting articles lately.  Much of that is a reflection of how busy we have been here at AndersonPC.  It has been a very exciting summer and 2010 looks to be a record setting year for growth.  We are in the process of moving our offices and doubling our space.  We’ve hired and expect a couple more new positions to open by years end.

To what do I attribute this growth, you ask?  Here are a few thoughts.

  • Outsourcing Saves Money:  In most cases, our newer clients are those that have downsized dramatically (our most recent was from 1100 employees to currently 80) over the last couple of years and no longer have a need for in house IT departments.  The are looking to outsource that department in an effort to save hard earned money.  AndersonPC has been able to save companies 30-60% of what they were spending with their in-house staff.  We are also able to expand the services they were receiving.
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  • If They Can’t Find You They Can’t Hire You:  More and more companies turn to the web and particulary gooogle.com to find what they need.  Its important to constantly work on SEO and PPC campaigns.  AndersonPC has seen great success this year with search engine marketing.  It accounts for approximately 50% of our new business opportunites.
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  • On Boarding Will Kill You If You Let It:  The on-boarding process is the first impression you make with a new client.  Do it wrong and it can set the wrong tone for the entire engagement.  Do be afraid of standing your ground and making sure the process runs smoothly.  The first 90 days should include a lot of  ’touch’ points.  Lots of follow-up, over-communicate, stress documentation and complete roll-out before moving on to the next client.  It costs a lot to get a new client, don’t waste the investment by moving through on-boarding too quickly.
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  • Process, Process, Process:  As AndersonPC has grown we have been increasingly aware of how important it is to have documented processes.  Each new hire needs to see how you want each process handled.  Why make the same decisions over and over again on how best to roll-out a new server or services?  Make it once, document, train, and deploy.  Tweak as needed.
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  • Manage The Numbers:  A friend of mine is a Dentist.  We recently spoke and, as often does, our discussion moved to how business is going for each other.  He mentioned he hasn’t seen a P&L (Profit & Loss) statement this year.  He assumes he made money if there is cash left in the bank at the end of paying his bills.  While that may be true there is so much to gain from reviewing everything about your business that you can calculate.  Manage the numbers today, manage the numbers this week, manage the numbers this month.
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  • Set Goals:  Without goals, you’re adrift.  Floating on the waves going whichever way they take you.  Know what you want out of your business and make goals that will take you there.  Make S.M.A.R.T goals.  If you start with the larger goals then work back to daily tasks its a lot easier to meet those goals.  Our HelpDesk manager often says, “Aim Small, Miss Small”.  That holds true, focus on todays numbers and goals and you’ll reach what you are after.

 

While none of these are great secrets to any of you reading this, I think it’s important to review what works.  Learn to build processes, make a good first impression through good on-boarding, manage your numbers, make it easy for people to find you and your services, and set SMART goals.  Its time for a middle of the year review.  Take stock in what you’ve accomplished and reset for the remainder of the year.

Good Luck.

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What is the ‘real’ definition of a Managed Service Provider?

May 3rd, 2010 by Blog Administrator, 2 Comments »

As our market becomes more and more saturated with “Managed Service Providers” I find myself struggling to believe that a one/two-man shop can be a true managed service provider.  AndersonPC has been working this business model since 2007 and has just recently felt like we’ve developed the correct infrastructure, process, procedures, and product offerings to truely call ourselves a Managed Service Provider.

I suppose the basic level of Managed Services can be defined by wikipedia:

“Managed services is the practice of transferring day-to-day related management responsibility as a strategic method for improved effective and efficient operations.  The person or organization who owns or has direct oversight of the organization or system being managed is referred to as the offerer, client, or customer.  The person or organization that accepts and provides the managed service is regarded as the service provider.”

To me, this definition just defines IT Outsourcing at its basic level.  Is that all that MSP’s (Managed Service Providers) do?   Are we just and IT Outsource provider standing under a different tent?

I suppose the question is:  how do I define managed services?  It seems to me its got to be much more than just IT Outsourcing.
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Know thy numbers…

April 5th, 2010 by Blog Administrator, No Comments »

A great management concept I heard about a couple years back is the 212° Concept.

“At 211 degrees, water is hot.  At 212 degrees, it boils.  And with boiling water comes steam.  And steam can power a locomotive.  It’s that one extra degree, just one, that makes all the difference.  And so many times, it’s that one extra degree of effort in business, and in life, that separates the good from the great.”

In order for this concept to take shape at AndersonPC, we have to know where we stand.  Are we at 199 degrees or 211 degrees?  This makes an enormous difference when deciding where to focus our team’s efforts.  Our office has adopted another motto. 

“IF WE CAN’T MEASURE IT, WE CAN’T MANAGE IT.”
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Backups are my friend…

March 17th, 2010 by Blog Administrator, No Comments »

There are some scary statistics out there regarding restoring your computer data after some sort of loss.  Here are some examples:

  • 6% of all PCs will suffer an episode of data loss in any given year. Given the number of PCs used in US businesses in 2003, that translates to approximately 6.6 million data loss episodes. At a conservative estimate, data loss cost US businesses $17.8 billion in 2003. (The Cost Of Lost Data, David M. Smith)
  • 30% of all businesses that have a major fire go out of business within a year. 70% fail within five years. (Home Office Computing Magazine)
  • 93% of companies that lost their server room / data center for 10 days or more due to a disaster filed for bankruptcy within one year of the disaster. 50% of businesses that found themselves without data management for this same time period filed for bankruptcy immediately. (National Archives & Records Administration in Washington)
  • American business lost more than $7.6 billion as a result of viruses during first six months of 2003. (Research by Computer Economics)
  • Companies that aren’t able to resume operations within ten days (of a disaster hit) are not likely to survive. (Strategic Research Institute)

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Life’s Delicate Balance

March 9th, 2010 by Blog Administrator, No Comments »

 

Ol’2010 has already turned into an exciting and challenging year.

In 1970, the Sears Tower in Chicago, Illinois began construction.  For almost 2 years workers moved earth and dug down 100 feet to the bedrock below.  Some 2 million cubic feet of concrete went into the foundation to support the enormous structure.  It took 12,000 construction workers just short of another 2 years to complete the entire building.  Almost as much time and effort went into building the foundation as did the rest of the structure.  When completed, it was a 110-story building and the tallest of its time.

That’s how I feel about AndersonPC.  I’ve been building a foundation of people, processes and tools to get the foundation ready for what we plan to become.  Sometimes I feel like that construction worker filling concrete in the foundation.  Mud on my face, tired, stressed, working the hardest I ever have and can barely see the sun out of the hole I’ve dug for myself.  Other days however, I feel I’m sitting at the top of my tower and catch a glimpse of my company and teams’ potential and abilities.  That vision is inspiring.  It motivates me to push through the tough days and work towards loftier goals. 
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