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Digg it UP - Self Storage Security - The Protective Umbrella
A Simple Employee Retention Tip: Try Before Your Buy
“TRY BEFORE YOU BUY”One of the key reasons why people leave is that they are not suited to a particular role or company and are looking for a more suitable position.ALL of the following are win-win scenarios where both the candidate and a business get to test out whether they are the right fit for each other or not.1. Temp to permTake staff on a temporary contract with a view to it becoming permanent (say after 3 months) if you both find you are suited to each other2. Probation periodEnsure every permanent recruit joins you on a 3-month probationary period so that you can release them if they fail to meet standards or don’t fit in (they’ll probably be wanting to leave anyway)3. See people in your business before you offer the roleAs part of the selection process, I encourage businesses to bring candidates in for a half day so they can see what it’s ‘really like’ and you can see how they get on with your teamved a plan through the permitting process that includes an attractive, separate, walled area for the RVs with its own gate and gate controls. Keypad zoning and time zoning make it convenient for both managers and tenants, according to Mike Beales, manager of the Azusa project. "We have to have some way to let the RVs in after hours. The people coming back from the lake at the end of the day simply can't get in during regular hours," he says. Lock Out the No-Pays and Slow-Pays A good layout of your facility with proper fencing cures the problems that come with most casual theft. Dockside slips, open bays and locked storage units all are used by people who occasionally forget to keep the bills paid on time. Delinquent tenants can be locked out with a good access-control s How to Build Good Client Relationships and Really Mean It (Part1) Meet Larry Lurker, Robbie Ripoff and Vicki Vandal. These characters pose a threat to your property and present liabilities for your company. They will do the very things that damage, not only your property, but also your company's good name. But take heart: With proper planning and preparation, you can protect yourself and put the perpetrators in their place--hopefully the county lockup.Attracting and keeping long-term clients is a prevailing approach for your growing business. Long-term clients who are pleased with consistent on-going good service, are likely to refer others to your business, and are more likely to buy further services from you. The confident professional, small business owner gains by focusing on certain sound tactics for long-term client maintenance. Just like a free online classifieds, your business should always keep, treasure and maintain healthy relationships with its contacts.Focus marketing on your existing clients. Your present customers have already done business with you for some time and are more likely to buy from you again. If you direct most of your time, efforts, and resources on serving your enthusiastic clients, you'll find that they will be your most effective free classified advertising tool.Behave towards your clients with honesty, humour, and respect and maintain this over time. Be consistent Put yourself and your facility under the protective umbrella called "security." Maybe that conjures up pictures of armed guards, guard dogs and razor-wire fencing. Or, perhaps your imagination runs toward the cunning, clandestine, ultra-high-tech tools of the super spies in the movies and on television. For the self storage industry, the reality of the situation involves the use of proven tools that will strike a good balance between choosing and using appropriate products, and getting a good return on the investment. The tools exist to provide solid security and add tremendous promotional power to your marketing program. Take Larry Lurker, for example. He's the kind of guy who hangs around trouble. Or maybe he carries it with him wherever he goes. If he's lounging around the boat dock, things disappear--a trolling motor one day, a depth finder the next. Larry knows the guy who can move the merchandise at the flea market. Control Who Uses Your Property To handle Larry, build a fence. A good layout of your facility with proper fencing cures the problems that come with most casual theft. Once you add automatic, computer-controlled gates, you have the convenience of complete access control without having to have personnel on hand to watch who's coming and going. In the traditional self-storage and RV-storage configuration, a fortress-style construction stands as the strongest defense. Put solid buildings all the way around your perimeter. If the parcel does not lend itself to that type of construction, then start planning early for fencing, convenient gated access and egress, and the software package that allows you to control the access. These programs provide for full delinquency control and a completely accurate written report of the access and egress activity at your facility. The better access-control systems tailored to the storage industry provide other customer-convenience features as well. Offer multiple units under a single billing account and code number. That's especially useful for a boater or RV owner who needs both outside storage for the vehicle and inside storage for other personal goods. Make available multiple code numbers for a single unit, so that family members or friends can share the space. Take advantage of something called "zoning," available in the software. Use additional control points for climate-controlled buildings or separate sections of the facility. The new Price Storage in Azusa and Valencia Self Storage, both in California, present good examples of mixed-use storage for recreational vehicles, dry storage for boats and inside storage. Both are designed with perimeter buildings offering a natural barrier to the property. Ivan Cohen, owner of the Valencia facility, moved a plan through the permitting process that includes an attractive, separate, walled area for the RVs with its own gate and gate controls. Keypad zoning and time zoning make it convenient for both managers and tenants, according to Mike Beales, manager of the Azusa project. "We have to have some way to let the RVs in after hours. The people coming back from the lake at the end of the day simply can't get in during regular hours," he says. Lock Out the No-Pays and Slow-Pays A good layout of your facility with proper fencing cures the problems that come with most casual theft. Dockside slips, open bays and locked storage units all are used by people who occasionally forget to keep the bills paid on time. Delinquent tenants can be locked out with a good access-control sy How To Make Boring Businesses Exciting tools that will strike a good balance between choosing and using appropriate products, and getting a good return on the investment. The tools exist to provide solid security and add tremendous promotional power to your marketing program.Wouldn't it be nice if everyone got as excited about your company as you are? Unfortunately some businesses just aren't very sexy; in fact, some businesses are downright boring. As a consequence, companies that sell commodity products and routine services tend to rely on presentations that load-up on features, specifications, and statistics that may be relevant to anal-retentive types, but hardly compelling to the vast majority of your audience.There is no reason why every company can't deliver an exciting image to its audience; one that generates the kind of buzz and excitement usually associated with companies like Apple, Victoria's Secret, Benetton, Absolut Vodka, and Sony.It may seem impossible to produce a whole lot of steam for things like sand paper, accounting services, and facial tissue, but thanks to the Web and it's extraordinary ability to deliver multimedia content, even the most mundane offerings can get hearts racing and the blogosphere Take Larry Lurker, for example. He's the kind of guy who hangs around trouble. Or maybe he carries it with him wherever he goes. If he's lounging around the boat dock, things disappear--a trolling motor one day, a depth finder the next. Larry knows the guy who can move the merchandise at the flea market. Control Who Uses Your Property To handle Larry, build a fence. A good layout of your facility with proper fencing cures the problems that come with most casual theft. Once you add automatic, computer-controlled gates, you have the convenience of complete access control without having to have personnel on hand to watch who's coming and going. In the traditional self-storage and RV-storage configuration, a fortress-style construction stands as the strongest defense. Put solid buildings all the way around your perimeter. If the parcel does not lend itself to that type of construction, then start planning early for fencing, convenient gated access and egress, and the software package that allows you to control the access. These programs provide for full delinquency control and a completely accurate written report of the access and egress activity at your facility. The better access-control systems tailored to the storage industry provide other customer-convenience features as well. Offer multiple units under a single billing account and code number. That's especially useful for a boater or RV owner who needs both outside storage for the vehicle and inside storage for other personal goods. Make available multiple code numbers for a single unit, so that family members or friends can share the space. Take advantage of something called "zoning," available in the software. Use additional control points for climate-controlled buildings or separate sections of the facility. The new Price Storage in Azusa and Valencia Self Storage, both in California, present good examples of mixed-use storage for recreational vehicles, dry storage for boats and inside storage. Both are designed with perimeter buildings offering a natural barrier to the property. Ivan Cohen, owner of the Valencia facility, moved a plan through the permitting process that includes an attractive, separate, walled area for the RVs with its own gate and gate controls. Keypad zoning and time zoning make it convenient for both managers and tenants, according to Mike Beales, manager of the Azusa project. "We have to have some way to let the RVs in after hours. The people coming back from the lake at the end of the day simply can't get in during regular hours," he says. Lock Out the No-Pays and Slow-Pays A good layout of your facility with proper fencing cures the problems that come with most casual theft. Dockside slips, open bays and locked storage units all are used by people who occasionally forget to keep the bills paid on time. Delinquent tenants can be locked out with a good access-control s Crisis Management - A Team Approach to Addressing Business Problems ence of complete access control without having to have personnel on hand to watch who's coming and going.During the course of day-to-day business, only one thing can be expected. That is that problems how will arise. Some businesses hold individual managers responsible to resolve problems. Others address problems through teams of managers aligned either organizationally or functionally with the problem. And yet other businesses intentionally or unintentionally ignore problems until they are so impactful on business outcomes that they must be addressed in some manner. The latter usually requires additional resource due to the crisis nature of the problem. In that business problems are a given, there should be a consistent methodology for addressing problems as they arise. The purpose of this document is to summarize one of the most effective was to identify, address and resolve business problems.Identifying business problems.One of the greatest challenges in business is separating problems from the numerous daily issues, challenges, competitive pressures a In the traditional self-storage and RV-storage configuration, a fortress-style construction stands as the strongest defense. Put solid buildings all the way around your perimeter. If the parcel does not lend itself to that type of construction, then start planning early for fencing, convenient gated access and egress, and the software package that allows you to control the access. These programs provide for full delinquency control and a completely accurate written report of the access and egress activity at your facility. The better access-control systems tailored to the storage industry provide other customer-convenience features as well. Offer multiple units under a single billing account and code number. That's especially useful for a boater or RV owner who needs both outside storage for the vehicle and inside storage for other personal goods. Make available multiple code numbers for a single unit, so that family members or friends can share the space. Take advantage of something called "zoning," available in the software. Use additional control points for climate-controlled buildings or separate sections of the facility. The new Price Storage in Azusa and Valencia Self Storage, both in California, present good examples of mixed-use storage for recreational vehicles, dry storage for boats and inside storage. Both are designed with perimeter buildings offering a natural barrier to the property. Ivan Cohen, owner of the Valencia facility, moved a plan through the permitting process that includes an attractive, separate, walled area for the RVs with its own gate and gate controls. Keypad zoning and time zoning make it convenient for both managers and tenants, according to Mike Beales, manager of the Azusa project. "We have to have some way to let the RVs in after hours. The people coming back from the lake at the end of the day simply can't get in during regular hours," he says. Lock Out the No-Pays and Slow-Pays A good layout of your facility with proper fencing cures the problems that come with most casual theft. Dockside slips, open bays and locked storage units all are used by people who occasionally forget to keep the bills paid on time. Delinquent tenants can be locked out with a good access-control s Computer Careers And Jobs: Building A Network Of Contacts single billing account and code number. That's especially useful for a boater or RV owner who needs both outside storage for the vehicle and inside storage for other personal goods. Make available multiple code numbers for a single unit, so that family members or friends can share the space. Take advantage of something called "zoning," available in the software. Use additional control points for climate-controlled buildings or separate sections of the facility.Almost all computer schools and colleges have some sort of job placement assistance (and you should ask about this before signing up!). The people who work in these departments work very hard to get your computer career started and get you into your first job in the computer field, but you shouldn't leave it all up to them. You need to know how to build two kinds of networks to get ahead in IT - the physical kind that carries packets, and the personal kind that can get you hired and get you ahead.When it comes to getting that first computer job, you have to show initiative. Don't just send a pile of resumes out and expect the phone to ring off the hook. If you're attending a computer training school, you have two great resources to draw on in your job search. First, schedule an interview with someone in the job placement assistance department. Ask them what you can do to help them get your computer career started. Showing initiative will also help you The new Price Storage in Azusa and Valencia Self Storage, both in California, present good examples of mixed-use storage for recreational vehicles, dry storage for boats and inside storage. Both are designed with perimeter buildings offering a natural barrier to the property. Ivan Cohen, owner of the Valencia facility, moved a plan through the permitting process that includes an attractive, separate, walled area for the RVs with its own gate and gate controls. Keypad zoning and time zoning make it convenient for both managers and tenants, according to Mike Beales, manager of the Azusa project. "We have to have some way to let the RVs in after hours. The people coming back from the lake at the end of the day simply can't get in during regular hours," he says. Lock Out the No-Pays and Slow-Pays A good layout of your facility with proper fencing cures the problems that come with most casual theft. Dockside slips, open bays and locked storage units all are used by people who occasionally forget to keep the bills paid on time. Delinquent tenants can be locked out with a good access-control s Measure TQM Success - Baldrige Assessment Case Study for Category 4 Information and Analysis ved a plan through the permitting process that includes an attractive, separate, walled area for the RVs with its own gate and gate controls. Keypad zoning and time zoning make it convenient for both managers and tenants, according to Mike Beales, manager of the Azusa project. "We have to have some way to let the RVs in after hours. The people coming back from the lake at the end of the day simply can't get in during regular hours," he says.In my previous article entitled: Market and Customer focus - Baldrige Assessment Case Studies for Category 3, I shared about common assessment findings of several companies being assessed by a group of trained and experienced assessors. In this article, I will provide similar findings but on Information and Analysis, of the Baldrige Criteria. It is provided in the form of case studies which include Criteria summary as described in year 2001 Baldrige Criteria, assessment findings in terms of Strengths and Area for Improvements.There are seven categories in the Baldrige Criteria. In this article, I will deal with the bold categories listed below:-Leadership | Strategic Planning | Customer and Market Focus | Information and Analysis | Human Resource Focus | Process Management | Business ResultsCriteria Summary – Information and Analysis The Information and Analysis Category examines your organization’s inf Lock Out the No-Pays and Slow-Pays A good layout of your facility with proper fencing cures the problems that come with most casual theft. Dockside slips, open bays and locked storage units all are used by people who occasionally forget to keep the bills paid on time. Delinquent tenants can be locked out with a good access-control system. Moving information from your accounting operations to your access-control operations proves to be a simple matter. Fortunately for owners, with a high level of cooperation among the vendors that specialize in serving the needs of the storage industry, a software link allows each program to share information with the other. Management programs tell the access programs which tenant codes should be valid. If a tenant goes delinquent, they're automatically locked out after a user-defined grace period. Having the security umbrella in place before the storm of complaints from tenants who've been ripped off or had their property vandalized makes good sense. Planning for security should be integrated at the architectural and engineering-design phase. Since that is not always practical, especially for older and existing facilities, good advice from experts helps. Digitech International, Inc., manufacturers and distributors of integrated access control and security systems to provide world class security solutions for self-storage and other facilities worldwide. says, "As an owner, you need to expect a vendor to help you design the types of systems and all the components that will help security tools work for you." Good planning simplifies the process and helps save money, especially for the final installation. You may visit Digitech on the web at http://www.digitech-intl.com to learn more about planning your facility. Add Security for More Profit and Less Liability Security for the self-storage industry has become more sophisticated and much more of a competitive tool. "We're seeing a lot of owners use individual unit door alarms, video surveillance and especially office security displays," comments Tim Calvin, owner of Calvin Access Control Systems in Columbus, Ohio. "It's not unusual to see owners who are building a $2 million to $4 million facility spend $80,000 to $120,000 to protect the property and be able to advertise that they have security." Individual-unit door alarms nail Robbie Ripoff and his type. They pose as good tenants, but use their access privileges to cruise storage lots for loose items or force entry into neighboring units. A security contact tied to alarm software puts a stop to that. Any intrusion to an armed unit causes an alarm, which can be local or tied to a central monitoring station. Alarm and access-control software validates a tenant code entered at the entry point, such as a main gate or entry door. A good code disarms the unit's alarm. Any other attempt to open an armed unit will sound an alarm, usually a loud siren. Law-enforcement officers will tell you there are two things thieves do not like: noise and lights that call attention to their actions. Who knows the motivation for Vickie Vandal? She may damage property and equipment by accident. She and others like her may be venting anger or just "having fun." No matter the reason, vandalism can be expensive for an unprepared owner. Kirt Grant, a partner in Lake Powell Boat and RV Storage in Page, Ariz., related a phrase he heard at a seminar: "Deter crime if you can, but if you can't prevent it, you need to catch
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