The Office (after Coronavirus)

WorkFromHomeC19

When the UK government took the decision to impose working restrictions in March 2020, the nature of office work changed dramatically overnight.

Not all the changes had a negative impact, people who could work from home found that they could be just as productive without the commute to the office.

We look at the lessons learnt and how they can be implemented to make the new normal a better place to work.

Working from home

It’s been a revelation just how convenient working from home is, both for the employer and the employee. No travel time meaning more productive hours and less pollution from driving, and, if your job allows it, more flexible working hours giving you more quality time with your family, fewer distractions (in some cases) and no arguments over who used the your milk.

Going forward, it’s easy to see that employees could use this to their advantage, downsizing their office as it only has to accommodate a fraction of the workforce while the remainder work from home or ‘hot desk’ in shifts.

First, lets look at how working from home could be a long term change, and at what a work from home office might need.

Home Workstation & Hardware

Home Office GDPR
Working From Home

It’s more than likely that your work from home employees will need a computer, chances are they already have a computer of some sort at home, but with the ubiquitousness of tablets and smartphones, it may well be that their home computer is somewhat outdated.

There are a number of options available here depending on the person and their position in the company.

The least expensive method would be to use a remote desktop session (even running it from a ‘live CD or USB rather than from their computers operating system) This requires little processing and memory power from the remote end as all the heavy work is done at the server end (typically cloud based or a server at your office)

You could provide a laptop for work use, giving you control over the spec and budget of the machines your staff are using, or you could give them a budget to buy their own devices for work use.

Unless particular processing power is needed on the remote devices, say for graphics work, then using a laptop is absolutely the best option. There’s a choice of touch screen, stylus input, tablet/laptop or standard laptops again depending on your employees needs.

Additional screens can be setup, especially if your staff are used to using them in the office, wide screens and rotatable screens are ideal for managing large spreadsheets or word processing.

Having a decent camera, microphone and speakers are also very useful especially when you’re running video conferencing calls or your remote workers are contacting clients. If the built in offerings are a bit low quality, it’s easy to buy and use external devices.

If the remote workers home space allows it, have a separate screen that can be dedicated to video calls and conferencing, leaving this logged into an office Microsoft Team meeting (or zoom, Skype or any other conferencing app) all day long so all your remote workers can see and speak to each other without having to start up a specific session. This helps give the office/team feeling to working and means that your staff can keep in contact as they would do normally, such as chitchat over a coffee in the office, or asking for help from colleges while their working.

If the remote workspace is not a dedicated area, such as a home office, then having hardware that can be setup and then packs away quickly and tidily is essential. If your remote workers are working on the dining room table, having two 20 inch monitors in place all the time would really get in the way!

Your remote workers might also need access to a printer or scanner. Depending on what quality they need and how often they need it, there are several options. From providing a multi-function printer/scanner at home for every day print jobs, to setting up the office printer to allow remote print access, and using the camera on the users smartphone as a scanner.

Home Broadband

Broadband
Home Broadband

In most cases, a lightning fast broadband connection at the remote end is not required, the amount of data sent to and from a remote worker can be kept quite light or buffered and cached when the broadband is less busy.

If there are other people sharing the broadband, hogging all the bandwidth when your remote user downloads a set of files is soon going to be picked up on, so using technology you can cache these files on the remote workstation over night, or access them via remote desktop software.

Carrying out a survey of your remote workers homes could help identify better broadband deals, and help your remote workers position their workstations and WiFi access points/routers in the best locations for connectivity and speed.

Compliance

It’s essential that your remote workers remain compliant with various legislation while working from home, Health and Safety and GDPR are the two that immediately spring to mind, but there may be others that you need to take into account.

GDPR General Data Protection Regulation
GDPR (DPA2018)

GDPR, the Data Protection Ace 2018, policies you have in place will need assessing and updating to cover the new situation, but this should not be a barrier to moving to this new working environment.

If home PC’s, tablets, smartphones or other devices are being used to process personal information, they should be assessed and managed according to your GDPR policy.

Business information and household information should be strictly segregated, and management put in place to protect the business data.

Assessing the working conditions for your remote users will quickly identify areas that need to be covered under your GDPR policy, this may include things like; screen privacy, data storage, printing and destroying printed material, transporting data between the office and remote office and data encryption.

Meeting Room & Reception

With your office staff working from home, it means the office doesn’t need to be so big. In lots of situations, a meeting room, reception area and one or two offices would suffice.

This means the meeting room can be large enough to accommodate clients and observe the social distancing rules, and and office workers in the building could work from one of the offices meaning they are isolated from other people while they’re in.

Your reception could be fitted with a client-facing monitor, and any ‘walk in’ clients could still speak with any member of staff via video conferencing.

A networked scanner and printer could also be made available to share documents.

Hot desking would need a slight revamp, with maybe just a docking station and screen left behind when a users leaves, and a wipe down of all surfaces before they are used again.

Keeping it all together

Making sure your company data is available to your remote workers in a reliable and secure way is essential. There are a number of options for you to look at.

Firstly there are cloud only solutions, services like Microsoft and Google. They are the big boys but that is a benefit; their platforms are reliable and robust and have a range of options and prices that give you access to different amounts of storage space and different tools.

Then there are hybrid solutions, part cloud based and part office-server based. These setups allow you to make use of all the transport facilities of cloud based connectivity, but with the security and peace of mind of an office-based server.

Then there is the pure office-only solution, letting you manage and configure every aspect of the system with an in-house server.

Each option has it’s pros and cons and are suitable to different types of work, in some situations you might combine different elements of all three setups to offer the right connectivity and security for your remote workers.

Having control over your data is essential. Being able to audit it’s use, monitor for breaches in your security, and remotely destroy data from a compromised device are all tools you should have at your disposal.

Making sure your data is backed up is critical. Also, making sure the data on your backup targets is up-to-date and includes any data that might be sitting on a remote device should be built into your backup plans.

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We can carry out a review of your remote workers home office and advise you of any changes we think are needed to make it a long term working arrangement. We can check internet connection, WiFi location, device security, working environment and identify areas needed to be included in your GDPR policy

We can also sort out your office based needs, with terminals, servers, internet connections, security and everything else you need to allow your remote workers to be as efficient as possible.

Contact us today to prepare your workplace for the new normal.

ICO Regulatory Action Policy

ICO

The Draft Regulatory Action Policy

The ICO have opened consultation on their Regulatory Action Policy which sets out how the ICO will deal with the organisations it regulats under various legislation, including the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR or the Data Protection Bill as it will be in the UK once we leave Europe), the Freedom of Information Act and the Privacy and Electronic Communications Regulations (PECR) Read more

Cyber Security Breaches 2018

Cyber Security Sqr

Cyber Security Review 2018

With only a month to go until the new Data Privacy regulations come into force, we;ve taken a look at the Cyber Security Breaches report released from the Department of Digital, Culture, Media & Sport. Read more

What Does Facebook Know About You?

Facebook Title

Facebook now say Cambridge Analytica had access to 87 million accounts

“It is reasonable to expect that if you had that [default] setting turned on, that in the last several years someone has probably accessed your public information in this way
Mark Zuckerberg (BBC News)
Mark Zuckerberg has said that 1.1 million of the accounts improperly accessed by the political consultancy were from UK based users. He said that some malicious services had used a facility that allowed them to link the public profile of a user to an email or mobile phone number acquired elsewhere. Read more

Data breaches from within the workplace

tinsleyNET Email Services

tinsleyNET Email Services

Protecting your businesses precious data

As we roll on towards the European Union General Data Protection Regulation early next year, it’s becoming even more important for companies of all sizes to tackle data security within their structure. Small businesses may have a simpler organisational setup but lack the required skills and resources to manage their data within the new regulations framework, and medium sized enterprises might have some in-house IT skills, but a massively more complex data structure and processing setup that are adding to data security issues. Read more

Fake Banking Text Messages

tinsleyNET Fraud Prevention

Social Media Scam

Which? show how easy it is to send fake text messages ‘from your bank’

A recent Which? shoes how easy it is to fake text messages as being from your bank or credit card company. In the report the journalist along with ‘ethical hacker’ Scott Mcgready are able to create and send convincing fake emails that show up alongside genuine text messages from a bank. Read more

Security

tinsleyNET Security
tinsleyNET Data Security

Security & Planning

Being able to plan for every eventuality would be a massive undertaking, so complex that you would spend all your time planning for the worst and not actually get anything else done.

But not planning enough could be your downfall if something unexpected goes wrong. So there needs to be a compromise, how much security and planning is enough?

Individuality

The level of security you need to take is completely unique to your business and your needs. But there’s one thing for sure, the security you need can not be bought pre-packed in an off-the-shelf solution, not if you want it to actually work.

What is security?

tinsleyNET Data Security

What do you think of when you consider the security you need?

For some it’s about personal security, either for yourself or a vulnerable relative, others might think of property security such as CCTV, dash-cams, digital door locks and remote entry systems. Then there’s digital security and that can encompass a wide range of things such as networks, documents, photos and portable devices.

  • Precious Data retention
    Keeping a secure and effective backup of your precious data, be it corporate accounts files or the irreplaceable photos on your phone, we all have precious data that needs looking after.
  • Company Network Security
    With so many data breaches being reported on the news it’s impossible to not be aware of the damage to your companies reputation a breach of data could cause.
    • Was the breach from outside your company or from inside?
    • Was the data protected under the law?
    • Who do you need to notify?
    • How can you prevent it happening again?
    • How can you meet expectations?
  • Home Network Security
    The security of home networks is just as vital as the security of business networks. Your home network could be breached for a number of reasons; to infect home devices with malware, to steal data and information, to take over your network connected IoT devices
  • Personal Device Security
    The security of your personal devices, such as smartphones and tablets, is even more crucial now that so much personal information is being stored on them, along with all your photos.
  • Identity Security
    Protecting your identity is key to all security, having the correct privacy settings in place on social media is only the start. You need to be aware of all the methods being used to scam users, from fake profiles to fraudulent apps, making sure you know what you’re clicking before you click is paramount.
tinsleyNET IT Servces Consultants #WeCanHelp

#WeCanHelp

Whatever your security needs, we can design and deliver the solution to meet them.

From home users to corporate networks, we can supply you with the most efficient security solution to help keep you, your company and your precious data safe.

Protecting your precious data

tinsleyNET Backup Services
tinsleyNET Data Backup and Security

Data Backup

Backing up your precious data is essential, but it needn’t (shouldn’t) be complicated or time consuming.

We can design and implement a backup plan that fits your needs, from backing up your family digital photos from your smartphone, to securely encrypting highly confidential corporate information.

Having a robust backup procedure in place and regularly testing that it meets your needs and is secure is an essential part of your data security solution, let us manage that for you.

Personal Precious Data

Many people use an external USB connected Hard Disk Drive to backup their family photos, some are simply saved on your phone. How many times have you heard a plea for a lost or stolen phone to be returned because they contain all of someone’s precious memories?

Inexpensive external hard disk drives are not infallible, in fact they are more prone to failure than the hard disk drive inside your computer. If an external hard disk does fail, the chances of successfully recovering data from them vary greatly, but in our experience it’s often a long, slow and costly process with no guarantee of success.

You need a backup solution that just works silently in the background, but one that you can rely on if the worst happens.

Business Precious Data

With so much of what we need to run a business now being digital based, having a secure and reliable backup of your business data that is regularly maintained and tested is essential.

It’s no good thinking you have a backup of everything you need only to find out that, when your backup becomes your last hope, it’s missing some critical data or is significantly out of date.

Backups need to contain everything you need to get your business up and running the the shortest amount of time if something catastrophic happens.

It’s not just backing up…

Your backed up data is your final fallback if things go wrong. If you accidentally delete something and have no other way of getting it back, your backup needs to come to the rescue.

But what if you save over a file? imagine you have a spreadsheet with all your client data on, you’ve been keeping it up-to-date for five years, then something happens and you accidentally save over it with some other data. Most basic backup solutions will simply write that accidental data over your backuped data too, thinking it’s keeping your backup up-to-date.

We provide solutions that allow you to go back into any file’s history and see how it was at any point in the past since the backup plan started, so you can recover and earlier copy of the file and recover your otherwise lost data.

tinsleyNET IT Servces Consultants #WeCanHelp

#WeCanHelp

We can design and provide backup solutions that will help protect your data from accidental deletion, loss of hardware or ransomware attacks.

Many recent malware outbreaks that used encryption to hold the user to ransom, also encrypted connected online data such as backups.

Our solutions run 24/7 but are not accessible to any virus that gets onto your computer, meaning if ransomware does get hold, as a last resort you can simply scrub your existing setup and start again from scratch in minimal time.

WannaCry : Massive Global Malware Attack

tinsleyNET Security Services

Malware attack infects PC’s globally

You have probably heard on the news that millions of computers around the world have been infected with a piece of ransomware, have you checked if your home and business PC’s are protected? Read more