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March 2008
In this issue...
►Making
the Most of Voice
►Virtualization
Overview
►Rules for
Managing a Mobile
Workforce
►Tips for a
Paperless Office
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6 Tips for a 'Paperless' Office
by Joseph Anthony
reprinted with permission from the Microsoft Small Business Center
Many people who use computers —
whether it's for their home or business — are moving toward a "paperless"
office. Simply, they are tired and overwhelmed by scraps of paper, clunky old
file folders, envelopes — and they want to reduce the clutter.
Don't believe me? Take a look at how
many messages are stored in your e-mail's in-basket. Now imagine how much paper
would have been generated if they hadn't come to you from cyberspace.
Many folks have made at least a
partial move to a paperless office. They're doing so this way: by using scanners
instead of copying machines, sending electronic faxes instead of paper faxes,
storing information electronically instead of in filing cabinets, giving
friends, clients or vendors information on CDs or through Internet attachments
instead of in bound folders. In short, they're getting greater return on their
hardware, software and technology investments.
Want to join the anti-paper campaign?
Save a few trees along the way?
Here are six things to keep in mind as you move
toward a paperless home or business office.
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Making the Most of Voice
The business benefits of hosted VoIP
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State of the market of voice
Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) is
a protocol optimized for the transmission of voice through the Internet or other
packet switched networks. VoIP is often used abstractly to refer to the actual
transmission of voice (rather than the protocol implementing it).
The first IP software, released in
1995, remained with Fortune 500s and large corporations that could afford the
benefits the innovative technology provided. VoIP is now a mature, well
developed offering which has hit the mass market and become popular with
small/medium businesses worldwide. |
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Benefits of VoIP
Companies are moving to VoIP is
because of the benefits. Companies are simplifying their business, leveraging
low cost data lines instead of higher priced phone lines and supporting one data
transport instead of two. Voice is simply another type of data. This can save
businesses the phone guy service call for any changes to the system (new users,
office moves, etc). Adopters also gain the enterprise features like 4 digit
dialing between their offices, no long distance charges between offices, &
remote dial tone to help lower costs and increase efficiency. You now have one
point of contact allowing you to stay in touch as if you never left the office.
This will help save valuable time, money, increase customer satisfaction and
enhance employee productivity.
Read more |
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Virtualization Overview
by Jane Cage, COO, HTS
We
live in a world that constantly forces us to “do more with
less”. Employees are expected to be more efficient.
Multi-function devices are becoming the standard on many
desktops. We multi-task by answering email, talking on the phone
and reviewing a spreadsheet – all at the same time. |
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We
shouldn’t be surprised then that IT departments are asking the
same of their fileservers. When server utilization gets
measured, we find that many servers have much more capacity than
they actually use for the majority of the time. With so much
excess capacity – why not run more than one server on a single
machine? That’s what virtualization is all about -- one physical
machine running more than one server operating system.
Virtualization is a “hot” technology right now and
here are some
of the reasons why:
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7 Rules for Managing a Mobile
Workforce
by Joanna L. Krotz
reprinted with permission from the Microsoft Small Business Center
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It's 10 a.m. Do you know where your
employees are?
The ranks of mobile workers are
swelling, fueled by the wireless Internet, powerful handheld devices, VPNs
(virtual private networks), and WLANs (wireless local area networks).
As many as nine out of every 10
employees now work from locations other than company headquarters, according to
Nemertes Research, a New York market researcher that specializes in emerging
technologies. In addition, some 40% to 70% of employees work in locations remote
from their supervisors.
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No wonder. Hiring remote workers can
provide big benefits for small business. "Employers can cut the costs of office
space as well as recruit from a much larger talent pool," says Manny Avramidis,
senior vice president of global human resources at the American Management
Association (AMA).
But managing untethered workers also
creates thorny challenges. How do you oversee performance? How do you keep
communications moving at the speed business now demands? What about training and
camaraderie? With so much information flying around, how can you secure
intellectual property? For the
answers read on. |
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