Step 1
Start here
Use the Technology Health Check when you want a clear review before deciding what to fix or buy.
Start with a Technology Health Check, then choose the follow-up work that makes sense: safer email access, better Wi-Fi, backup cleanup, computer setup, useful documentation, or simpler office workflows.
Health Check first
Scoped follow-up work
Home users secondary
Fewer connection problems
Clearer equipment setup
Less guesswork later
The goal is not to sell every service at once. The goal is to identify what matters, then fix the right things in the right order.
Step 1
Use the Technology Health Check when you want a clear review before deciding what to fix or buy.
Step 2
Turn the highest-priority findings into scoped cleanup projects with clear outcomes.
Step 3
Use hourly or monthly support for bounded business-hours help, not open-ended coverage.
These services can be sold after a Health Check or used for a clear standalone request.
Use this when you are not sure what is solid, what is fragile, or what should be fixed before something breaks.
You get a plain-English report and fix-first plan before deciding what to spend money on.
Call when old accounts may still be open, employees struggle with sign-ins, or Microsoft 365 feels messy and hard to manage.
Business email is often the easiest way into a company. This helps keep access cleaner and safer.
Call when Wi-Fi drops near desks, checkout areas, shops, exam rooms, home offices, or anywhere work depends on staying connected.
Employees and customers should not have to fight the Wi-Fi to get normal work done.
Call when important files live on one computer, nobody has tested recovery, or you are not sure what would happen after a failure.
You should know whether important files can be recovered before the day you need them back.
Call when a new computer needs to be ready for work, a printer will not cooperate, or a slow Windows system keeps interrupting the day.
Less downtime, fewer interruptions, and smoother changes when equipment needs to be replaced.
Call when someone new is starting, someone has left, or account access has been handled informally for too long.
New people can start faster, and old access does not quietly linger in the background.
Call when the same forms, file moves, approvals, checklists, or status updates keep eating time every week.
Save time and reduce small mistakes that happen when the same manual steps are repeated over and over.
Use this after an initial review or project when you want a recurring local contact for small issues and regular check-ins.
You have a local IT contact with clear expectations instead of an unlimited or 24/7 helpdesk promise.
Next practical step
A Technology Health Check is the easiest way to get a clear list of what matters before spending money on projects or equipment.