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By Anthony
Licate
All small to mid-sized company owners want to know where their
dollar is being spent when it comes to computer technology in their
organization. The challenge is for them to get the information they
need to make the right purchasing decisions. ‘Tell me in English
why you think we need this technology in our company?’ That
question goes through every company owner’s mind and mouth. Getting
the answer that makes sense to them is another story. How can the
people in charge of your company understand what the value is of
specific technology if their computer support people cannot
articulate why it is so important?
This guide will assist every company owner in
understanding how to communicate with your technical consultant so
technical recommendations are applied, understood and the full
potential of technology is realized throughout the company. After
all, your technical consultant wants you to appreciate what they
do. And you will not be able to appreciate it until you understand
how it effectively applies to you.
Company Objectives-
Understanding your company objectives is not a one way street. This
information cannot be kept with upper management. Share it with
your technical consultant. “Give a man a fish and you feed him for
a day. Teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime.”
Big picture- Your technical
consultant must understand how the company functions as a whole.
They must understand the duties of the different departments. How
else will the company be able to apply technology to the business’s
everyday processes if those processes are never articulated?
Changing with the times- Just
because a technical consultant has worked in an environment for ‘a
couple years’ does not automatically mean they are aware of changes
to the intricacies of the company’s business functions. Just like
technology, business strategies change. It’s important to
consistently keep them in the know when these changes occur at the
business level.
A picture is worth a thousand words-
Tell you’re technical consultant to chart out why they recommend a
specific technology. Managers love colors and charts. After all, a
picture is worth a thousand words, right?
Define; Measure; Analyze; Improve;
Control. As long as every project is measurably articulated
in the following order, upper management will have no issues
understanding what is being recommended and how to proceed in the
future. None of the steps above should be skipped. This is very
important. The clearer the projects are defined quantitatively, the
easier it will be to control processes going forward.
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Anthony Licate is the President of Spidernet Technical
Consulting, LLC. The company provides technical computer network,
ecommerce and wireless enterprise data services in and around the
Philadelphia area. He has worked with multiple types of businesses
to strategize, re-align and implement technology. He can be reached
at
aj@spidernetconsulting.com
© Spidernet
Technical Consulting, LLC
613 Woodcrest
Ave
Ardmore,
PA 19003
info@spidernetconsulting.com
(877)-281-0322 or (215)-508-1036 |