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Keeping up with your business growth means improving the technology that's helped get it where it is. But there's more to it than just buying new stuff. You need to integrate it seamlessly with your existing structure. Here are 5 steps to make it happen in Detroit.

Detroit Workforce Development Department
313-873-7321
707 W. Milwaukee
Detroit, MI
Detroit's Work Place
(313) 962-9675
455 W Fort St
Detroit, MI
Bartech Group
(313) 567-1900
333 W Fort St Ste 1420
Detroit, MI
A F S C M E Employees Local 345
(313) 964-4670
600 W Lafayette Blvd
Detroit, MI
A Fcme Registered Nurses
(313) 961-7245
600 W Lafayette Blvd Ste L106
Detroit, MI
Rosa Parks Satellite Center
313-628-2200
1300 Rosa Parks
Detroit, MI
A Fscme Local 836
(313) 963-4220
600 W Lafayette Blvd
Detroit, MI
Detroit Department of Workforce Development
313-962-9675 Ext. 527
455 W. Fort Street
Detroit, MI
A F S C M E Local 3309
(313) 964-0980
615 Griswold St
Detroit, MI
SER Metro- Detroit
313-846-5447
9301 Michigan Avenue
Detroit, MI
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5 Steps to Integrating Your Small Business Technology

Your small business is growing fast. Your technology needs are changing just as rapidly. But starting over with a totally new system isn’t an option – who can afford the downtime? IT consultant Josh Carroll says it’s like “needing to change a car tire, but not being able to afford to stop the car.”

A better solution is to replace components you’ve outgrown – such as software or a lower-end printer – and add them to the existing technology infrastructure. If you can do that without any hiccups, the integration has been “seamless.”

Josh Carroll, principal and COO of EndSight, a Berkeley, Calif., firm that manages other companies’ technology networks, recently got some firsthand experience with the challenge of seamless technology integration.

Two-year-old EndSight established its own in-bound call center in 2005 and staffed it with five employees. At first, calls trickled in from end users, but grew steadily, tripling in volume to 30-40 calls a day in the last year, Carroll says. Its employees and its phone system were “maxxed out,” mainly because the original phone system was never designed for call center use. The only option was to invest in new technology.

EndSight took a methodical approach to integrating its new phone technology – a five-step process that any small business owner can follow when integrating new hardware, software or specialized equipment:

1) Identify the problem

When EndSight saw its customer satisfaction, efficiency and employee satisfaction.*p>Copyright 2009 StartupNation, LLC

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