Episode 39 – Planning Your Business Part 3

Today we'll talk with a business planning expert and find out just how important it is to have a plan for your business. Part 3 of a four part series.

TechPodcasts Promo Tag :10
Intro 1:17
Billboard :26

News and Comment segment 4:39
The Force Field.net upgraded to new forum software December 16. You can access the forums from the Forums link in the menu on the left sidebar of the home page at TheForceField.net or at http://www.theforcefield.net/forums..

Adobe released eight security patches for its Acrobat and Acrobat reader applications January 12.

Sponsor: Try GotoAssist Express free for 30 days! For this special offer, visit www.GotoAssist.com/techpodcast.

VMWare announced that it it will buy the open source e-mail application Zimbra from Yahoo.

Facebook has partnered with security vendor McAfee to provide protection from malware for its 350 million members.

Commercial Break 1:00
Get Great Web Hosting at GoDaddy.com and save 10%! Listen for the discount code in the show. GoDaddy.com 1:00

Intro to Topic 1:43
Today we'll talk with Tim Berry, founder of Palo Alto Software and conceptual author of Business Plan Pro. He will discuss the myth about business plans, the real purpose of having a plan and how a business plan can help you understand your business better. Part 3 of a four part series.

Interview with Tim Berry 17:31

Episode 40 Part 4 Teaser :22

Wrap up and Close :46

Comments, questions or suggestions? Send them in to comments@theforcefield.net. Feedback on this topic will be read by the host and included in future episodes of the show. Visit us at http://www.theforcefield.net !

©2010 Savoia Computer. All rights reserved.

 

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The Force Field now carrying TPN coverage of CES 2010

(TheForceField.net) January 7, 2010 — The Force Field is now carrying video coverage of The Consumer Electronics Show to the public and members of The Force Field.

Through an arrangement with Techpodcasts.com and GeekNewsCentral the site will feature daily HD video coverage from the floor of CES 2010. The Force Field podcast is a member of the Techpodcasts.com Network.

The videos will be hosted by Todd Cochrane of Geek News Central, Andy McCaskey of SDRNews and Jeffrey Powers of Geekazine to provide daily reports from the floor of CES 2010 in Las Vegas.

There are three separate video productions. The official video episodes on the Primary Channel will be published on the home page of THEFORCEFIELD.NET and available to the public. These are HD video feeds that will recap the events of each day.

There is also a second video production. This will be a BackChannel feed. This daily video update will follow the hosts and crew and provide a behind-the-scenes look at the CES event normally only available to members of the press, including press events and insider tours. In addition to the two recorded video feeds members of The Force Field will be able to watch a third feed in real time. The feed will be streamed live from the floor of CES and will be available based on available time and bandwidth.

The backchannel and live video feeds will be available from TheForceField.Net web portal to members of The Force Field only. The backchannel can be viewed from a special menu link after login. Members can watch the live feed from the Home Page of TheForceField.Net after login.

Membership to TheForceField.Net is free but will be subject to administrator approval for the event. All fields on the membership application form must be filled out with valid information such as a valid e-mail address, mailing address and contact number to be considered for approval.

CES is an annual event held every year in January. This year the event will be held January 7-10, 2010.

 

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The Force Field to carry TPN coverage of CES 2010

(TheForceField.net) January 5, 2010 — The Force Field will begin video coverage of The Consumer Electronics Show to the public and members of The Force Field beginning tomorrow.

Through an arrangement with The Techpodcast Network and Geek News Central the site will feature daily HD video coverage from the floor of CES 2010. The Force Field podcast is a member of the Techpodcasts.com Network.

The videos will be hosted by Todd Cochrane of Geek News Central, Andy McCaskey of SDRNews and Jeffrey Powers of Geekazine to provide daily reports from the floor of CES 2010 in Las Vegas.

There will be three separate video productions. The official video episodes on the Primary Channel will be published on the home page of THEFORCEFIELD.NET and available to the public. These are HD video feeds that will recap the events of each day.

There is also a second video production. This will be a BackChannel feed. This daily video update will follow the hosts and crew and provide a behind-the-scenes look at the CES event normally only available to members of the press, including press events and insider tours. In addition to the two recorded video feeds members of The Force Field will be able to watch a third feed in real time. The feed will be streamed live from the floor of CES and will be available based on available time and bandwidth.

The backchannel and live video feeds will be available from TheForceField.Net web portal to members of The Force Field only. The backchannel can be viewed from a special menu link after login. Members can watch the live feed from the Home Page of TheForceField.Net after login. Guests and Non-members can watch the Primary Channel Daily Wrap Show and Interviews from the home page of TheForceField.Net.

Membership to TheForceField.Net is free but will be subject to administrator approval for the event. All fields on the membership application form must be filled out with valid information such as a valid e-mail address, mailing address and contact number to be considered for approval.

The Force Field also carried TPN coverage of CES in 2009 and 2008. The videos proved to be popular and the decision was made to feature the event this year as well.

CES is an annual event held every year in January. This year the event will be held January 7-10, 2010.

 

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2010

Everyone says about New Year’s resolutions which I always find amusing that someone would have to wait for the New Year in order to make a resolution. Especially when I hear people saying things like “my New Year’s resolution is to stop drinking”…That is typically the best. My answer is “why”?….Why not just make a New Year’s resolution of “I am going to drink better liquor this year than in the past”….To me it makes no sense to make a resolution.

Why not add a resolution instRead More…

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Barrister to techs: if you want to get paid sooner, you will pay

Barrister Global Services has done it again. They’ve devised another scheme to keep more of the money they owe to their techs for services performed. However, this time there’s a twist: it’s on the promise of faster payment.

Barrister, which claims to be “the oldest and largest woman-owned computer service company in the United States”, is a national contractor based in Louisiana. The company was founded 1972 and advertises a network of 15,000 techs on the roster who are independent contractors. The company is well established and is well known among field service technicians and IT consultants as a source of contract work.

Years ago Barrister had a fairly solid reputation as a good national for perform work for and was known for timely payments. After hurricane Katrina hit the state in 2005, all of that changed. Barrister is a different company now and its reputation among techs has changed along with it.

Service Providers who work or have performed work for Barrister during the last few years report a number of frustrating issues with the company, including poor communication, lack of support and poor customer service. The biggest issue, though, is slow payment for services rendered – or no payment at all.

Barrister promises to pay techs 21 days after the service order is closed (to Barrister’s satisfaction). The payment is typically sent by check and mailed to the tech via regular US mail. Unfortunately, techs frequently find themselves waiting months for payment and some have had to expend considerable time, energy and money trying to collect by whatever means necessary, including legal recourse.

This hasn’t deterred Barrister from finding any excuse to slow payment or avoid it altogether. The company has created a specific set of requirements for properly closing calls with threat of non-payment for not following the steps correctly. It  uses the typical delay tactics  such  the old “we never received the fax” or “we have no record the core parts were returned” and, of course, “the check is in the mail” lines; old-style, but tried-and-true shell games played by  other nationals with less than stellar reputations in the industry.

However, lately the company has come up with more creative ways to avoid payment or get back some, if not all of the money they pay out to techs (when they do pay). What is disturbing is that these new tactics not only put the techs at a financial disadvantage, each successive scheme puts them at an even greater risk than the last of losing more than just the money owed.

Early this week techs contracted to perform onsite service calls for Barrister received an e-mail announcing a new “SpeedPay” service. According to the e-mail, this new service provides faster payment to techs via direct deposit to their bank accounts within seven days after successfully closing the service call, instead of the usual 21. On the surface, this seems like a good idea, shorter processing time, faster delivery, easier access to funds. But there’s a catch. Actually, there are two.

You have to pay for it. And it’s not cheap.

Barrister requires a fee for SpeedPay that is equal to 20% of the total invoice. Twenty percent! It means that the higher the ticket, the more you have to pay. This isn’t just a transaction fee, it’s a penalty for receiving payment due.

This is not the first time Barrister has tried to separate techs from the money owed them. Last February the company launched its Quality Initiative program, which assessed a penalty for techs who arrived to an onsite service call late. The fee? One hundred dollars, an amount that was often more than the value of the work order itself. I blogged about it in Barrister to bill service providers $100 for tardiness – techs are ticked .

Granted, tardiness on the job affects all parties involved. If I were a national contractor, I would be concerned about it as well. But a hundred dollars? That’s not just a penalty, it’s another source of revenue.

Now the tactic has shifted from penalizing techs for tardiness to penalizing them for trying to collect on the work order. That’s an entirely different approach, and for the tech, it’s worse.

It sounds somewhat incredible that a company which owes you money will charge you to collect from them, but here it is, in all it’s slimy arrogance. In case you don’t believe me, here is the entire e-mail below:

Dear :

We recently conducted a survey of our technician base and many technicians requested an option to be paid faster on work completed.

As a result, Barrister is proud to announce our SpeedPay program.
This program will give all technicians, at the time of dispatch, the ability to choose their payment terms – either standard 21 days or 7 days via ACH (excluding Bank Holidays).

***The days between completion and payment start counting once all steps required to close a work order have been completed. These include, but are not limited to:

· Call into Barrister Call center to close call from site.
· Fax/scan and email signed RFS to Barrister for processing.
· Provide return tracking numbers for all cores .
· Return all parts within Barrister stated guidelines.
· Complete any other customer specific instructions as directed by your dispatcher or the RFS.

Please note that ACH payment is only available via the Speedpay program at this time. Barrister anticipates that ACH will be available for standard payment terms in the 3rd quarter of 2010, but that is only an estimate at this time. Without Speedpay, payments will only be sent via US Mail.

In exchange for the 7 day payment, Barrister will withhold 20% of the payment typically made to you.

For example, you accept a $45.00 work order and choose speed pay. Once all work is complete as described above, Barrister will issue an ACH payment to your account 7 days later, excluding bank holidays. This payment will be for $36.00.

If you accepted the same call and chose standard payment terms, your check for $45.00 will be mailed to you 21 days following call completion as described above. This will be sent via US mail only.

These accelerated payment terms are offered as requested by Technicians and to assist with cash flow. These terms can be selected per dispatch, so it can be changed as needed. However, once a work order is dispatched the options cannot be changed.

In order to be eligible for this program, we will need you to log in to your TechWA account and provide us with your bank routing and account number. If you do not have a login for TechWA, please email techwas.signup@barrister.com.

 

  Please let us know if you have any questions.

 

I had a few questions, so after confirming the e-mail from multiple techs I called Barrister to ask them. I was not granted access to anyone with authority to comment on the e-mail. A representative who answered the phone said he was aware of the program but did not have enough information to answer my questions. No one else was available to answer them and so far voice mail has provided no return calls.

Reaction from Service Providers was negative. “20% for faster pay?” wrote Frank De Leon of Frank’s Computer Shop in the OnForce forums. “I do not think I have done a job for them in at least a year because normal pay was so bad now they want to pay even less. “

 “For as long as Barristers has been so horrible- how is it possible they can still conduct business at all?”, someone posted on TFF forums. “It’s got to be extremely hard for them to find techs to actually do the work which, in turn, means they’ve got to be losing contracts all the time for failure to perform.”

“From what I have read online it is the techs that continue to take the work. Some were into Barristers for $15K.”, another tech posted. “Sorry I cant see letting myself get that deep into a biz that doesnt have AAA rating.” Barrister currently has a B rating with the Better Business Bureau. 

There are a fair amount of comments by both customers and techs alike on various complaint boards on the Internet, a lot of which is not complimentary. Google Barrister Global Services and you will find them. You can read more about Barrister, including information about its known history, location and reputation in The Force Field forums .

Now, I mentioned there were two catches. The first one, the 20% fee, is obvious. The second is more subtle, but potentially more dangerous. They want your ACH information. They want access to your bank account.

Generally, ACH access is not one-way. When you give someone ACH authorization you give them the ability to deposit money directly to your bank account. You could also potentially give someone the ability to withdraw money at will.

I covered this in a segment in one of the Special Edition episodes of The Force Field podcast. I want to reiterate it here. Never give ACH access to a national contractor, especially a company you have reservations about doing business with. This is a risky and potentially dangerous thing to do. Bounced checks are one thing. Access to the contents of your bank account is something else entirely.

Of course, ACH transactions are not free. There is generally a small charge associated ACH transactions and for companies who offer Direct Payments to their customers it averages about 12 cents per transaction, according to electronicpayments.org . Barrister charges 20% of the amount of the transaction. On a $45 work order it’s not twelve cents. It’s nine dollars! That isn’t a transaction fee, it is a junk fee and that is just slimy.

Personally, given Barrister’s current reputation and shady tactics, I wouldn’t give them ACH access no matter how fast it is, but that’s just me. If you do work for Barrister and are willing to pay 20% for payment in seven days (as they claim), do it at your own risk. You have been warned.

 

 

State of the IT Industry 2009 Contest – Win an mp3 player!

Last week I posted an article on the front page of theforcefield.net revisiting a series of podcasts about The State of the IT Industry in which four IT professionals predicted where their business and the industry as a whole would be in the coming year.

The idea is to find out if their predictions were true, what happened in their segment of the industry that made them come true in spite of current economic conditions and why.

Of course, not everyone has had the same optimism or success in their businesses, which brings up an interesting point. Why did some do well and others didn’t?

I think there are a few reasons but there is one in particular that was discussed in all four episodes that became a common theme. Hint: It was discussed outright in episodes 31 and 32.

At the end of the article I challenged everyone to review the episodes for themselves and discover what I believe to be one reason discussed that can make or break your success in this market, especially in a difficult economy.

To find out if I’m right and what it is, we are holding a contest. I invite everyone to listen to all four interviews again and post your comments in The Force Field Forums or send an e-mail to comments@theforcefield.net.

If you guess my answer correctly or figure it out I will put your name in a drawing to win an mp3 player similar to the one we gave away in the Summer of Podcasts contest earlier this year. (The winner was in Sweden).

This mp3 player will be shipped loaded with The Force Field Podcast Special Edition Volume 1. This edition, which is currently available in The Force Field Podcast store, is a collection of the first six episodes of The Force Field (when it was for OnForce Providers only) remastered with additional content and an additional segment in each episode written and produced specifically for the collection and never before released. The episodes are COMMERCIAL FREE.

Contest rules: 

  1. Post your answer in the forum contest thread or via e-mail.
  2. You may discuss the topic in the thread but only one official posted answer per entrant.
  3. You must include a valid name/username or e-mail address in the post (you can spell out (at) instead of @ to prevent spamming. If you use username only make sure the e-mail address on your member account is correct.
  4. You must be 18 years or older to participate.

A winner will be chosen from all correct entries posted in this thread or received by January 31, 2010. The winner will be announced on a future episode of The Force Field.

The State of the IT Industry 2009: Looking back, were we right?

Earlier this year we ran a four-part series on The Force Field podcast called The State of the IT Industry, a comprehensive study of the effects of  national economy in a downward trend on the IT services industry.  During this series we interviewed four service professionals and asked them how their businesses were doing and where they thought the industry would be in the coming months. Given the situation with banking industry, high unemployment and a world economy on a downward spiral their answers were somewhat surprising. Overall, they were very optimistic.

 In episode 29 we talked with Pat Palmer of The Computer Guy, heard how his business is doing well in spite of the economy and how he expects this trend to continue in the months and years to come. In episode 30 we talked with Kris Crispell, a computer consultant in Oregon and he told us the same thing. In episode 31 we talked with Crisantos Hajibrahim of Virus Woman. He told us why he entered a new and growing area of the IT market to keep his business profitable, heard how he did it and found out how he is riding out the economic storm with Google Apps. In episode 32 we wrapped up the series with The VAR Guy, listened to his advice on diversifying and found out where he thought the industry is headed.

They represented four different segments of the industry with four different business models. Yet their views were the same: they all were very optimistic about where their businesses were going, in spite of the economic situation.

I wanted to revisit this at the end of the year and find out if their expectations were met or exceeded, or if they had all been overly optimistic. A general look at the current state of the industry indicates that, overall, IT has fared well, especially compared to other industries, and this trend is likely to continue, at least for awhile. In fact, I received a number of comments from other IT providers who seemed to support this observation.

For instance, at the start of an interview in a recent episode with Pat Palmer, who returned to discuss business plans, I asked the follow-up question, “How has business been since then? Is it about what you expected?” The short answer was yes. In fact, in July of this year he expanded his business, opening a retail storefront downtown.

In a discussion on the topic in the FF forums , Chris Bequeath indicated he was having one of his better years and responded “recession my ass.. if this is bad.. keep it bad!!!!”

A tweet from Leon Jackson (ljtechservices) said: “I was busier than ever this year.”

I received a number of other comments from service providers as well, most were similar to those above.

Not everyone agreed, however. There were a few who said business was about the same or slower and one or two said they were getting out of the business entirely, though not necessarily due to the economy.

Interestingly, this general spike in business for IT is in stark contrast to the last major economic upset which occurred in 2001 – after 9/11. At that time the industry took a serious hit and it was somewhat slow to recover.

What happened? How did the industry escape a fate in 2009 it endured eight years earlier? What changed between then and now that made IT more resilient to such an economic downturn? Personally I believe it has more to do with our society and our increased dependence on technology than anything else.

During the past decade we have become more reliant on a high tech infrastructure in nearly all facets of our existence, from computer controlled electrical grids, utility delivery systems, transportation, communications and national security to business operations, domestic activities and personal diversions. We now have devices, tools and processes that either did not exist ten years ago or were luxuries that became commodities on which we rely heavily for both domestic and commercial use today.

What was considered a novelty then is now almost a necessity. When it fails or breaks, it needs to be fixed or replaced pronto. Such is the state of the IT service industry in 2009. It is no longer just another field, it is one that has become increasingly vital to the maintenance and perpetuation of our entire societal infrastructure. The economy may be bad, but without IT, it could become worse.

While that may answer the question as to why the industry as a whole survived and flourished, there is still the question as to why most service providers did exceedingly well and others didn’t. To answer that question, I went back to interviews and analyzed them from another perspective.

I listened to the series again (yes, I listen to my own podcast!) and found a common denominator among the responses from all four guests. Yes, their views were all positive and optimistic. Why? What was the common element here that made them optimistic and sure of their success?

I think I know the answer, but I want to know if it is indeed the one thing that made the difference. To find out if I’m right and what it is, I invite everyone to listen to all four interviews again and post your comments here, in the forum thread The State of the IT Industry 2009 – Win an mp3 player! or send an e-mail to comments@theforcefield.net. If you guess my answer correctly or figure it out I will put your name in a drawing to win an mp3 player similar to the one we gave away in the Summer of Podcasts contest earlier this year. (The winner was in Sweden).

I will give you a hint: there are clues in each episode and it was actually discussed outright in episodes 31 and 32.

 

 

 

Microsoft Office Accounting ..Going Away

For the past few years I have enjoyed using Microsoft’s free accounting software for my small computer business. Though it took some getting used to at first I found it easy for me to use for the past few years. I planned on updating my main laptop, which I use for all invoices, and accounting for my business to Windows 7. Since I planned on doing a clean install I searched for a new copy of Office Accounting to re-install after I was done. I then found out that there are no more downloads, and Read More…

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