Business Owners Wanted!
Cut Costs and Increase Efficiency
Wanted: Business Owners Who Want To Significantly Cut Their IT Support Costs And Eliminate The Frustration and Worry Of Computer Network Problems.
Announcing a new network support program designed for business owners that don’t want to worry about their network’s security, reliability, or stability ever again!
Are you sick and tired of worrying about the security of your network against the latest spyware, virus, or hacker threat?
Would you like to have peace of mind knowing that your network is always being watched and secured with the most up-to-date security patches, virus definitions, and firewall settings?
Are you and your staff too busy to perform the regular maintenance and support your network needs to function properly?
If so, this letter was written specifically for you.
Mt. Hood Computer Service, Inc. is looking for clients who want a network support program we are calling Worry-Free Workplace™. This program is designed to give you all of the network support, security, and maintenance you need without the expense and overhead of a full-time IT staff. Plus, as one of the first Worry-Free Workplace™ clients, you will receive the first month FREE when you sign up with a 12-Month agreement.
Why Our Clients Have Been Begging Us To Deliver This New Program...
With the constant changes to technology and daily development of new threats, every a small network requires ongoing maintenance from a highly-trained technician. But obviously the costs of hiring a full-time IT person are not always feasible, even for companies with 10 to 50 workstations.
Up until now, you only had two options for computer support.
Option #1: This option is the most common; you designate the most technically-savvy person on staff to be your make-shift IT manager and only bring in outside help when your “internal guru” runs into a network crisis they can’t solve.
Problem is, you are pulling this person away from the real job you hired them to do AND unless they have the time to stay up-to-date on the latest developments in IT support and management, they don’t have the skills or knowledge required to properly support and secure your network.
This inevitably results in a network that is ill-maintained and unstable, which then results in excessive down-time, overspending on IT support, and expensive recovery costs.
Option #2: This is really foolish but we see it every day; businesses that use their network until it “breaks” and then call in the experts to repair or replace whatever stopped working.
This reactive model of network maintenance is a surefire path to extensive down-time, lost data, and excessive spending on IT support, not to mention major disruptions in staff productivity, sales, cash flow, production, and customer service that can never be recovered.
Just take a look at these recent disasters that happened to other small businesses who were NOT performing ongoing maintenance on their computer network (all names have been withheld to protect the companies’ privacy)
Property management company suffers weeks of down-time for what should have been a simple, inexpensive repair; hard costs to company: $9,000
A 10-user property management company was not monitoring or maintaining their server. Due to the overuse and lack of maintenance, it started to degenerate and eventually shut down under the load.
This caused their entire network to be down for 2 full days and cost them $3,000 in support fees to get them back up and running. Naturally the costs were much higher when you factor in the lost productivity of their 10 employees during that time. This client did not want to implement a preventative maintenance program, so the same problem happened again 2 months later, costing them another $3,000 and 2 days of down-time.
Failed hard drives costs software development company $2,800 and 4 days of downtime
A local software development company kept all of its source code and demonstration software on one computer. Backup were being done regularly, but were not always completing successfully. Predictably, the hard drive failed at a time when it had not been successfully backed-up for over a week. An attempt to recover the drive was made, but it was beyond rehabilitation. Some recent data was recovered and transferred to a new disk, but the computer had to be rebuilt and most of the data was restored from the last successful backup. It took 4 days and $2,800 to get the computer back in working order.
Had their network been monitored and if maintenance had been performed regularly, the failing hard drive and unsuccessful backup would have been detected, preventing the crash, loss in productivity due to downtime, and $2,800 in service costs.
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