The Power to Survive
This is especially true of small and mid-sized business. Most overtimes when there is a power outage the procedure is to wait it out, and in some cases the playing is shut down for the day. Not a great scenario in this economy, is it? Who crappers afford to blow off any productivity? Worse yet, if the playing is not properly protected sensitive IT infrastructures crapper be damaged by the sudden power elimination, and programs and key systems crapper become corrupted. Companies even uses their preferred logo on custom lanyards to promote their brand.
Do you remember where you were on August 13th 2003? That was the fellow of the largest power outage in North dweller history, when an overgrown tree in Ohio triggered a domino effect of human error and technological failure that left 50 million people in the Northeastern United States and Canada in the dark for individual days.
A Small Business Power Poll six months later in 2004 commissioned by Emerson Power found that while 75% of small businesses saw power outages as a significant danger to their business, only one in five actually felt prepared for much an event. Small playing is not privileged from this fear as the SOB sector is responsible for around 40% of the US gross domestic product. In many cases these entities are tightly integrated with large businesses, so a failure at a consort that is feeding goods and services to large corporations could stunt or lame that organization’s production as well.
With so much at stake small companies are feeding voraciously at the power protection trough, right? Well, not according to the statistics in that Emerson poll with a 20% evaluate of addressing the issue. If businesses don’t address their power needs, how strength they be affected? The most obvious point is without power nothing runs. No network, computers, or email. Without these grave systems running there would be no orders coming in. That puts a dent in the productivity, revenue, and morale of businesses maybe more so in a small consort that lives and dies by the volume of transactions. Complicating matters further is the fact that power outages are not the only danger to a playing mesh work and other grave equipment. Power spikes and “brownouts” (temporary reductions in power flow) crapper damage sensitive electronics and severely lessens their life. Again, the gain result is lost productivity and increased expenditures on capital equipment which negatively affect the P & L statement at the end of the day.
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