How would you rate your efficiency?

Not bad for a days work. Do you always stay on-site when it takes that long? If I feel that a job might take 3 or more hours to finish I will take it home.

Well, everyone of my services I have my own time limit. For example, a virus removal has a time limit of 2 hours, whereas a OS install has a time limit of 1 hour. I tally up the total of requested services and then I have my total allotted time to stay at a clients home or office.

This case was different though. First I told my client that I am testing my skill today and that she will have her own "Personal Tech" for the rest of the day and next, it was a family friend. All my customers are the same people I've been working with for a few years now so I already have a good enough relationship with most of them. This one was literally a family friend so I was comfortable (she even sat me down for dinner). But never no matter how many services a customer request would I stay for more than 4 hours for an in-home service. (In-office is exempt).

I need to advertise myself and get out of the client loop I have right now ;)
 
Welcome to my world .... but not at their home. In the shop only. Sit around in jammies all day I can crank out 5 or 6 PC's at about $175 avg invoice. When you get really good you'll convince them to drop them off and pick them up ;) and you don't even have to change when it's bed time!

LOL!!! welcome to my world too, but I av only $75 in my market for virus removals!! :p
 
You are planning to do 4 full on-site virus removals in one day at 4 different locations.....good luck with that one, be ready for a long day!

If it was me, I would be far more efficient by scheduling to pick up all 4 computers in the morning, taking them to the lab and multi-tasking with the virus removal. With your method, your wasting your time (no offense :p)

The problem is, you really never know what to expect. You could have one computer that throws off your whole day. At least in the shop, if you have a "problem child" you can work on it while still working on the others. In the field, you are sitting fighting with the "problem child" while the others just wait.


I agree. I rarely, if ever, perform virus removals on-site because I can't be quite as thorough as I could be back at my place and with at least 48-72 hours of time in my arsenal. Not to mention the fact that you stated that one computer could actually take longer than expected because of a "problem child," and then you can't go to your other jobs and you end up screwing yourself over; in your case, 3 times over. :)
 
ProTech Support said:
You are planning to do 4 full on-site virus removals in one day at 4 different locations.....good luck with that one, be ready for a long day!

If it was me, I would be far more efficient by scheduling to pick up all 4 computers in the morning, taking them to the lab and multi-tasking with the virus removal. With your method, your wasting your time (no offense )

The problem is, you really never know what to expect. You could have one computer that throws off your whole day. At least in the shop, if you have a "problem child" you can work on it while still working on the others. In the field, you are sitting fighting with the "problem child" while the others just wait.

I agree. I rarely, if ever, perform virus removals on-site because I can't be quite as thorough as I could be back at my place and with at least 48-72 hours of time in my arsenal. Not to mention the fact that you stated that one computer could actually take longer than expected because of a "problem child," and then you can't go to your other jobs and you end up screwing yourself over; in your case, 3 times over. :)
Ditto and ditto. When you get enough business coming through you'll find difficult to do days like that (4 on-site jobs). In fact, I try to do everything in the shop knowing that there's always going to be jobs you have to do on-site. It just minimizes the amount of time you spend in the field and your customers are happier because you can do a more thorough job in the shop. Multi-tasking (working on multiple PC's at once) is a good thing for your revenue stream and a good thing for your customers (win-win). My customers always tell me this is a "good problem to have." ;)
 
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