There is a massive amount of pressure to adopt artificial intelligence right now. Many business owners are convinced they are falling behind the curve and are ready to spend thousands of dollars on dedicated platforms simply because they feel they have to adopt them or go extinct.
When business operations lack standardized document structures, daily productivity suffers a measurable decline. Employees tasked with generating routine correspondence, client proposals, or operational reports frequently spend excessive time locating past examples, copying text from disparate sources, and manually stripping out outdated details.
I was looking at a client’s budget recently and noticed something that has become all too common. They were paying for three different project management tools, two separate cloud storage providers, and a dozen "AI-powered" browser extensions that nobody could quite explain.
Do you look at your technology as a cost center to be managed, or as a springboard for new revenue? If you’ve been following us for a while, you know we like to think of it as the latter. Small businesses spend much of their IT budget just to keep the lights on, stuck in an endless cycle of “surviving” rather than “thriving.” But with a virtual CIO, or vCIO, your business can reframe the conversation surrounding technology and look at it as an endless realm of opportunity rather than an endless loop of costs.
The Federal Trade Commission has spent years providing businesses with guidance and advice concerning their security. Now, this guidance has converted into enforceable mandates.
In short, your business needs to have systems and protections in place—not plans—in order to abide by last month’s executive order that focuses on the prevention of cybercrime and fraud. Let’s touch on what needs to be accomplished in order for you to do so.