Tuesday, May 9, 2017

Men Backing Up Your Business Accessories Men's Business Dressing Etiquette Young Professional & University Graduate Student Etiquette

Outclass the Competition baesoe.com
Harold Almon Etiquette Coach
Be at Ease School of Etiquette Austin
Men Back Up Your Business Accessories. Information is to be provided to help someone return to you your stuff.
1. Your Swiss Army Knife can be marked with your drivers’ license number.
2. Your wallet may be thinned out. Original photographs and mementos may be left out, unless you have copies. An in case of emergency and out of state family member contact number could be stored in it. A Xerox copy could be made of what you elect to keep. On the copy, you can write the customer service number for each bank, credit, and shopping card, and it can be stored somewhere else.
3. Cellular telephone, Personal digital assistant (PDA,) organizer, and lap top computer information may be hot synchronized with your computer hard drive or saved to a backup system.
4. Your address book is to be backed up. You can Xerox it once each year. You may transpose information to it from last year's calendar, and then update your e-mail address book.
5. Insurance can be obtained for each major accessory at scheduled and replacement value with or without a deductible.
6. Get homeowner insurance to recover lost cash covered by your policy. Get insurance for your smart cellular telephones, (Palm, $4 a month,) and Lap top computer from the store, a private provider (www.safeware.com,) or homeowners’ policy. Most replacement items can be shipped within 72 hours of claim verification. You might have a replacement item sent and the deductible charged to your account.
7. You can have back up data stored in space. You may download backup data and your rebuild your database.
8. Keys are to be insured to cover replacement of locks. A duplicate copy of each key can be duct-taped to a secure place such as a locked mail box, or left with a trusted friend.
9. Avoid storing shopping cards with keys. Place a sticker with a call number: work, cellular, or service provider, on each piece of technology.
10. You can list, "Reward if returned." The reward may be equal to the insurance deductible. Have the item and/or the reward dropped off at a local office or left at a local police department. This agent could have the item returned, pay your reward, call your number and advise you when the item has been recovered, all without revealing your home address.
11. Record serial and model numbers of all electronic equipment. Items are normally listed on the back or bottom of each piece. You can provide a copy of this list to the police to assist loss recovery.
12. Security: avoid checking any accessory/technology item as baggage, where possible. Use a password to ensure all sensitive information is protected. You may set one so one is required once the item has been inactive for a period of five to ten minutes.
13. Call the "Number" associated with the item the moment you notice it is gone. You can call contacts: coworkers, family, and friends, if your technology accessory held sensitive or private information, or to just say that your old number has been disconnected and that the new number is forthcoming.

You may call your service provider to have the number disabled, deny someone access to data, or to delete data remotely (lockout.com.)
14. Report each item loss or stolen to the local police and to each applicable company. Get an incident number now and a copy of the police report for later. You could be required to show this report to your bank, credit card, work, telephone, and/or insurance company in order to receive coverage.
15. Call your bank and/or Credit Card Company within 24 hours. Past this period, you can be held liable for fraudulent purchases and cash withdrawals.
16. Contact a check authorization company and/or your bank to put a stop payment on all checks that you were carrying. When outstanding checks have cleared, close the account, and open a new one.
Loss happens. Back it up. You already have the accessories. Enjoy your stuff.

No comments: