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Extra Space in Your Community

Posts Tagged ‘files’

Businesses: Protect the Privacy of Your Customers

Saturday, June 26th, 2010

If you are worried about identity theft, there was quite a chilling article on theĀ ABC7 news site yesterday evening. A woman in Aurora, cleaning out an apartment that she rents, found a file cabinet in it. The apartment had previously been rented by a bail bondsman, and the filing cabinet contained documents from people who had bailed someone out of jail at some point, dating back to the 1990s.

“They all have birth dates, names, Social Security numbers, driver’s licenses,” said the landlord, Hermine Putman, in yesterday’s ABC7 article. She went on to comment, “That could create an identity theft for some of these people….If I throw it in the trash, this can get into the wrong hands.” Putman was absolutely right. But she was just getting started.

She went on, “I don’t have the time, in my age, to stay out in that heat out there to sort all those papers out, what should go to a shredder. Why was it left up to me, to do this?…I could have taken them and just threw them in the trash for all I care, but I do care.”

Putman, unlike the bail bondsman who abandoned the records, was determined to do the right thing. This made me think. Putman is a landlord for an apartment building. But the same thing could easily happen to a self storage facility manager or operator, and perhaps it is more likely here, because many businesses use our units to store their old, archived files. Of course, if we find any personal records, we will do just what Putman did–turn the files over to the police, in case they related to any ongoing identity theft investigations.

But, like Putman, I want to point out that the original responsibility for safeguarding those records lies with the business or organization that originally generated those records. If your archives include sensitive information belonging to your clients or customers, it is your responsibility to see that those records, when you no longer need them, are either returned to to the client or customer to whom they belong, or are shredded. I cannot say what your legal obligation is — I suggest you check with a lawyer to find out for sure. But morally, I have no hesitation in saying that you cannot ever simply abandon records, whether they contain financial information, medical information, information that could be used for identity theft, or even sensitive personal information such as might be contained in old diaries or student essays.

Frankly, there is no need to throw files into a dumpster, even if it is a recycling dumpster. Shredding the files does not stop them from being recyclable. It is not hard or time-consuming. If you cannot afford a shredder, check with the Better Business Bureau, and they may be able to let you know of a free shredding day.

Take the time to protect your customers. We do — we take tenant records very seriously. I urge all my business tenants — and even those businesses who don’t use self storage — to give some thought to your record disposal practices. Someday, the thoughtfulness of a small business owner may be the only thing standing between you and identity theft — and when that day comes, believe me, you will realize how serious a matter this can be.

Decluttering Your Office

Sunday, May 16th, 2010

Do you ever read Physorg.com? It can be a little dense. But I learned something there about storage — computer storage, that is. Here is what I learned: scientists are on the verge of a digital storage breakthrough. Instead of the few hundred gigabytes per square inch that most hard drives can store currently, it may soon be possible for hard drives to store as much as ten terabytes per square inch.

How does that help you declutter your office? Here’s what I suggest. If you have hard copy files that you must hang onto for insurance or tax reasons, or simply for occasional reference, you could scan those documents and put them on your hard drive. Granted, you couldn’t possibly have a ten terabyte per square inch hard drive yet, but you can easily buy an external hard drive that has at least a couple of terabytes on it — enough to be going on with, as they say. Use Adobe Acrobat to scan the files thatĀ  you must archive and keep directly into pdf documents. It’s a tedious process and it will take some time. But consider this. Once you’ve scanned the files, you can use an indexing program on your computer to search them. You can also organize them in folders by date, so that you have an easier time finding what you are looking for.

You may still be required by law to hold onto certain kinds of hard copies of files. And you may prefer to have a second set on a hard copy as a backup, no matter what. But having a scanned copy means two things. One is that if you are backing up your digital files regularly onto an external hard drive, then, in case of emergency (like the Cumberland River flood in Tennessee), you can just grab your external hard drive and take it with you when you evacuate. They don’t take up much space — it’s like bringing a book with you.

More importantly, though, digitizing your hard copy files means that you can take the hard copies themselves and stow them some place for safekeeping. You could put them in a closet, attic, or crawl space. Or, you could rent a self storage unit and keep the files there. There have been several stories in the news lately about self storage owners and operators rescuing documents from abandoned self storage units, and making sure that those documents get restored to their rightful owners (or to a government agency) so that nobody’s personal information is placed at risk for identity theft. The self storage industry takes the security of your documents seriously (as Guillermo pointed out earlier today) — it’s us or a safe deposit box, and I think our spaces are much more affordable!

I know it takes a long time to digitize documents. But make time and do just a few each day. I think you’ll be glad that you did!

If You Can Read This Post, Thank a Teacher

Saturday, May 1st, 2010

In case you didn’t realize it, next week is Teacher Appreciation Week. It’s worth taking some time to express appreciation to your favorite teacher or the teacher of your children. Personally, I am not in school at the moment, but I like to take this week every year to write a letter to one of my former teachers. I have found that even the teachers who do not remember me (it’s been a long time) are very touched to receive a letter from a former student. Everyone likes to be appreciated, and teachers tend to be underappreciated most of the time. They work hard. They are underpaid. They often spend their summers going back to school themselves in order to stay fresh and up-to-date in their content areas. They often use their own money to buy supplies for class projects (what if we expected office workers to provide their own pens, paper, and staplers? or if we expected firemen to invest in their own hoses? or if we expected cashiers at the grocery store to buy bags to put the groceries in? can anyone even imagine expecting college professors to provide paper, pens, and pencils for students?).

I have a special reason to appreciate teachers, of course, because many of them use a lot of self storage. Some teachers keep a storage unit dedicated to their old college textbooks, boxes of old papers (their own schoolwork and the work of their students) and class materials, boxes of clippings that were topical and connected with a class topic, once. That’s in addition to the stuff they store in their classrooms: materials related to upcoming chapters and units, seasonal materials, extra paper and pencils, art supplies, multimedia items such as audio and video materials, reference materials, cleaning supplies, lost and found boxes, “treasure boxes” full of small items to give out to students as prizes or rewards, you name it. There’s something wonderful about a teacher’s archives that make them different from the archives of any other professional worker–certainly different from the file boxes that get put in storage by lawyers, accountants, and bankers. A teacher’s archives are literally a labor of love.

It doesn’t matter whether the teacher is an elementary school teacher, a college professor, a high school wrestling coach, a martial arts master, a theatre director, or even that most maligned and underappreciated of all our teachers — a parent. Take the time this week to do some small thing to show appreciation to at least one of those people. Even if the teacher you choose is just a coworker who inspires and teaches you with his or her example — take a moment and write a short note, bring flowers (or donuts), or simply phone that person to let him or her know how you feel. Now is the time — do it this week.

If you can read this post, thank a teacher.

Small Business Advice: Save Money By Lowering Overhead

Saturday, February 20th, 2010

Some Denver businesses have found a way to ride out the economic downturn without going out of business — they have managed to reduce overhead by downsizing. The biggest overhead expense for many businesses, especially service businesses, is rent. There are three ways to reduce rent expenses, if you are a business: move to a less expensive location, move to a smaller location, or run your business out of your home. Increasingly, many entrepreneurs are choosing to do the latter. Working from home works well for:

  • professionals whose clients do not need much face-to-face time in an office, or who can meet clients in the client’s office, such as lawyers, accountants, writers, editors, and consultants
  • people who run service businesses where they see only one client at a time, such as massage therapists, health care practitioners, veterinarians, tutors, pet groomers and petsitters, private investigators
  • people who run businesses in which the essential work of the business goes on off-site in response to a call, such as plumbers, air conditioning/heating repairworkers, construction work contractors and subcontractors, and information technology specialists
  • people who run businesses that are Internet-based
  • people who run businesses that don’t depend on customers who wander in off the street on impulse while shopping
  • people who run retail businesses with sales that are based on home parties or personal connections, like Tupperware, Usborne Books, or Young Living Essential Oils

It isn’t necessary to have a lot of extra space in your home to shift your business to your home. You need to have enough room for your day-to-day work, of course. But inventory and supplies can be stored off-site, in a nearby self-storage unit. At Extra Space, we have professionals who use self-storage to hold the files they need to archive, retailers who use our units to hold inventory, salespeople who use our space to hold samples, and repairmen who use self-storage to hold tools that they need but do not use daily. It can be a big relief to stop writing a monthly check for office rent in addition to the rent or mortgage payment check that you write for housing. For some small business owners, self-storage is the creative solution that saved their businesses. Think about it.

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