ForeSite Technologies

ForeSite is your team of designers , developers , and computer consultants for computer support , web development and network support in the Hartford, CT and Worcester, MA areas.

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"Having returned from vacation, I wanted to offer major kudos to the team for the tracks you made last week.  From my perspective, it seems that we are moving very well in relation to our goals and schedule...know how grateful we are."

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Posts Tagged ‘time management’

Are you LinkedIn, or LinkedOut? (2/3)

March 16th, 2010 by Bryan Czajkowski

5 Important Ways To Find Great LinkedIn Contacts Quickly

Most of you tech savvy business people out there have had a LinkedIn account for years, but have you been truly using it to increase your business opportunities? If you want to reap the benefits of a LinkedIn account, you need to commit to actively using it on a consistent basis. At the very least you should look at your profile every day to see to see who your contacts are networking with, and if there are more “People You May Know” listed in your profile. Remember, your contacts’ new contacts are now in your network, and the groups they have joined may be of interest to you.

If you’re interested in learning about some good LinkedIn practices that help you make the most of your profile and find great contacts quickly, download part one and two of our three part series.

I gave myself surgery - bad idea?

November 30th, 2009 by Michael Giuffrida

Pocket Knife for Self SurgeryWhen I was working from home the other day, I started to feel a sharp pain in my side.  At first, it was just annoying but it really started slowing me down.  I was working on filing the forms for my defense in the murder charges that had recently been brought against me which really isn’t that fun so I decided that instead of continuing, I would give myself surgery to see if I could find the cause of my pain and resolve it.  I figured hey, I’ve been living with this body for 38 years, who knows it better than me?

So I got out my trusty pocket knife and jammed it into my side just above the area where the pain was so I could look around.  I took out a few organs and made quite a mess before I realized that I was probably in over my head, so I jammed everything back in and used my trusty Swingline stapler to close my side up.  Then I went back to the murder defense because I was there, who could defend me better than me?

Sound ridiculous?  Of course!!  But for some reason, we step into situations every day where non-technology folks decide that they can setup a new server or firewall themselves because they figure “how hard could it be?” only to find out that their “work” has not not only delayed the project, but for us to undo what they did will take twice as long as if they had simply let us take care of it.

We have created a checklist of questions to ask yourself before embarking on an IT project on your own.  By answering these questions honestly, it will help you decide if you should call a professional.  You can probably come up with a similar checklist for when to call a doctor or lawyer as well.

Download 5 Questions to Ask Yourself Before Starting an IT Project on Your Own

Time Planning in a Service Business

April 23rd, 2009 by Michael Giuffrida

Putting the right people in the right place

Being in a service business providing computer support and web development, our product is our people’s time.  As our technical staff work on many projects and clients within a week, time planning for their weekly schedule is critical to ensure the best possible use of their time as well as the proper availability for emergencies that crop up.  To manage that in our world, we have implemented a categorization process for the types of work we perform and track what percentage of our time goes into each type.

To begin, we examined the work we did over a 12 month period and determined that the work was either recurring scheduled, planned projects, or “pop-up” work that occurs during the week that we didn’t know about ahead of time but had to handle.   I’ll refer to those types as Scheduled, Project, and Pop-up for the rest of this article.

As expected, the scheduled work we had a pretty good handle on and could calculate how much of our week would be dedicated to that.  The piece we had the least control of was the Pop-up work as these types of requests would come from our clients as they had issues or needs that couldn’t wait until their next scheduled visit.  While that was unexpected work, we found that on a week to week basis, the percentage of our time that this took was fairly regular.  So now we had two of the three variables somewhat accurately calculated.  But what about the project work?

In a client oriented network support and web development business, it is unrealistic to expect that your technical people will be 100% billable unless that are working on long term projects or placed full time at a client.  We use 80% as a target for our people which helps to account for vacations, personal time, internal meetings and training.  With that target, we need to figure out how much Project work we need to fill the gaps between the predictable Scheduled work and the peaks and valleys of the Pop-up work to hit our billable goals.

In planning the workload properly throughout the week, we have increased productivity of the individual engineer’s and developer’s as well as managed the workload to avoid missing SLAs or burning out our staff.
Additionally, proper management of the different work types has led to higher billable ratios and happier workers.  All around, it has been a win-win.