Showing posts with label Facebook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Facebook. Show all posts

Monday, December 17, 2012

Facebook Timeline for Business Webinar recording

Thanks to everyone who joined our webinar on Monday! 

If you missed the presentation or if you would like to view a recording, please click here for the video:

Facebook Timeline For Business: What You Need to Know!

Still have questions?
Give us a call at 949-243-7498 or email us at info@on-siteoc.com today! 


Visit On-Site Technical Solutions for information on how you can move to Google Apps or other Cloud Computing applications. Call us for all of your network computing and business IT needs. We can also help with your data security and mobile computing. Follow us online below. Call or text me at 1-949-212-2168.

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Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Monthly tech news and tips from On-Site Technical Solutions

Are you receiving our free email newsletters?  Below is our August monthly tech news and tips edition. If you'd like to sign up, send an email to info@on-siteoc.com with the subject "newsletter." 


Monthly tech news + tips from On-Site Technical Solutions
What Your Web Browser Says about You
What Your Web Browser Says about You
Does your choice of web browser offer any insights about your personality?
Continue reading »
Securing Your Business Accounts from Hackers
Securing Your Business from Hackers
A timeless reminder to small business owners: don’t assume you’re protected!
Continue reading »

Bring-Your-Own Device Takes off in the Workplace, but What Are the Risks?

Bring-Your-Own Device Takes off in the Workplace, but What Are the Risks?Are you able to access your computer network at work with your iPad? What about your iPhone or your laptop computer? This trend, known as bring-your-own-device or BYOD, is on the rise in the workplace. It makes sense: When companies encourage employees to bring their own devices to the office, these same companies don't have to spend as much on desktop computers and other high-tech equipment.
The move also makes sense for workers. Employees will be more familiar with their own devices. And if they bring their own laptops and tablets to work, they can more easily transport their files, email messages and important documents back and forth from home to work.
The Risks of BYOD
But the BYOD movement does come with risks, risks that ComputerWorld columnist Darragh Delaney highlights in a recent column.
Delaney writes that IT security personnel are growing more concerned about the risks of letting employees use their own devices to access workplace networks. The greater the number of outside devices hooking into a network, the greater the risk that a network will fall victim to some sort of malware attack. After all, not all employees take the proper steps to protect their computing devices, especially when it comes to increasingly popular tablets.
Company Information at Risk
At the same time, when employees load sensitive workplace data onto their mobile devices, companies face an entirely new set of concerns. What if employees lose their mobile devices? There's no guarantee that sensitive information won't fall into the wrong hands.
Delaney writes that companies must properly educate their employees on how to use their mobile devices as safely as possible. Some companies might want to ban outside devices from their networks. That's not entirely reasonable, though. Outside mobile devices help employees do more work more efficiently. Companies don't want to limit the production of employees by refusing them access to the network with these devices.
The BYOD Trend
BYOD is a trend that isn't going to fade away. Mobile devices are critical work tools for a growing number of employees. Companies, then, must make sure to educate these employees on how to safely connect them to the workplace network.
Read more at ComputerWorld.
How to be a better procrastinator on Facebook: pro tips
How to be a better procrastinator on Facebook: pro tips
Continue reading »
Don’t bother buying smartphone antivirus software (for now)
Don’t bother buying smartphone antivirus software (for now)
Continue reading »
Do you make these common PowerPoint mistakes?
Do you make these common PowerPoint mistakes?
Continue reading »

Visit On-Site Technical Solutions for information on how you can move to Google Apps or other Cloud Computing applications. Call us for all of your network computing and business IT needs. We can also help with your data security and mobile computing. Follow us online below. Call or text me at 1-949-212-2168.

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Monday, July 9, 2012

On Support From Tech Companies - Part I: Free Services

How much support is enough for a business application. What if the product is free? If the business is paying for the software?

One of the services we provide for our clients is Vendor Management. That means that we are the face of your company to your technical vendors. We've always found that our techs talking to their techs can get to the cause of problems and resolve them much quicker than a non-technical person talking to a tech. (This refers to technical problems - process problems with business line apps are usually best solved by the power user and the software company. We'll only intervene if needed and requested). 

We spend a significant amount of time and energy researching, working with, vetting and making recommendations for vendors in the small and mid-sized business market. We've found and work with some great ones, but we also work with some bad apples and steered our clients away from potentially unreliable vendors.  

These three links to articles, one from the NY Times and two from the Wall Street Journal, partly address this issue - unfairly to the tech companies.


Let's first talk about the lack of phone support from vendors providing free software addressed in the NY Times article: Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn. I'm leaving out Quara because, well, it's a website and none of our clients use it or need us to manage their relationship with that website. 

We have two main reasons for recommending strongly against using free applications for critical business functions: 

  1. They're free. This puts the customer completely at the mercy of the vendor.  Cool tool that's really helping your business? Oh, that's now gone because... 
  2. Real-time support for free tools is usually non-existent.  

Should you use these three tools for you business? Absolutely. Should your entire marketing strategy revolve around these tools? Probably not. Even if the correct business decision is to rely almost exclusively on free tools for social media, always have a backup in place for specific functionality in the free tools and for the free tools themselves.

Because the tools are free and used by hundreds of millions of customers, expecting real-time, phone tech support is simply unreasonable. That's an unsupportable business model. Even providing live chat is asking too much of a vendor with that model and number of customers. 

I am much less sympathetic to vendors charging customers for their products, but even for some of them, my $4.99 a month doesn't really rate a live help desk. 

In the Times article, it took two days for the consumer to get his problem solved. Is that really unreasonable for a free product? From the social media consultant in that article:
“The phone users are getting left out,” said Mari Smith, a consultant who trains businesses in how best to use social media. She should know. Because her consulting company lists an 800 number, frustrated people call all the time, looking for help with their Facebook accounts. She eventually adjusted her phone message to callers to explain that she does not provide technical support for Facebook.
“I just got bombarded,” she said. “They’re just so desperate to reach a real human being.”
Ms. Smith said she believed that large Internet companies might someday return to phones to set themselves apart from competitors. “The ability to call up and get a real human being — the companies who can do that and go back to basics are really the ones that will be winning out and humanizing their brand,” she said.   
This points to a market for social media classes - but how many of the people looking for free support on a free product would be willing to pay even a nominal fee for a class? I would suggest that online companies that have products for which they can charge will need to have some kind of phone support at some point. But I'm not sure why the free ones will need to provide that same level of support.  

Even if it is unfair that these free products won't provide live support, don't expect them to trim their profits to suddenly set up enormous call centers to handle the volume of calls they would  field. 

If your business needs help with these tools either hire a consultant or use the help available. If your business is serious about social media, definitely hire a consultant or give someone in-house the time to actually manage your social media. We know some great social media consultants that can help any size company. If your business isn't serious about social media it may be better to stay on the sideline. I can put in contact with an expert who can help you figure that out. 

Next: Paid support for technical products. 

Visit On-Site Technical Solutions for information on how you can move to Google Apps or other Cloud Computing applications. Call us for all of your network computing and business IT needs. We can also help with your data security and mobile computing. Follow us online below. Call or text me at 1-949-212-2168.

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