What do you do if you have an IT issue but your schedule is chaotic? For Jennifer, one of our quick fix engineers, Adam, worked around her "wild and ever-changing schedule" to find time that worked for her. He also solved the issue quickly, minimizing the impact to her already tight schedule. Great job, Adam!
Palmetto Technology Group (PTG)’s Post
More Relevant Posts
-
"A well defined problem is half solved" - Charles Kettering While working on a personal project and weighing the pros/cons of different solutions I had to stop my self and fix some of my bullet points. In one of the cons sections I had written "not very dynamic". While true it completely missed the point of why I was chalking this up as a con to the solution. I rewrote that same con as "Since tests are likely to use the same endpoint over and over again there needs to be a way to identify that a specific request maps to a specific response independent of the test thats running. Uploading a single manifest before any tests doesn't support this common use case." One of those cons is half-solved...the other is not.
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
🤝 Everyone at incident.io talks to customers 🤝 No matter their role, everyone is encouraged to build relationships and help out whenever they can! And before our new VP of Engineering, Norberto Lopes, joined the team, he witnessed this firsthand. As a customer of ours, he quickly learned that here, "talk to the customer" isn't just something we say, it's a core part of how we operate! Check out the full conversation to learn why this was one of the major reasons he ultimately decided to join incident.io 👇
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
England’s finest 🏴CNC Manufacturing & Design - please send your RFQ to [email protected]
And here are the complete parts following the second operation.
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
From Our FAQ: I’m experiencing a problem with a current supplier that we’re struggling to resolve. Can you help? Absolutely. Our team of engineers stands ready to review any challenges that you’re experiencing, share our findings and work quickly to reengineer the part to resolve your issue.
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Gray work is everywhere in the public sector, learn what it is and how you can remove it with Quickbase.
So you've got a Gray Work problem - let's solve that 👇 https://bit.ly/3T3FnVn
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Competitive secret; do the most features & as many parts as possible in the first operation. This gets your cycle time up which gives you time to work on something else. And when programmed properly will save you a ton of cycle time per part. Anyone know why? 🍻 -Scott.
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Detail of 'We know the sound of two hands clapping. But what is the sound of one hand clapping?'
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
I often hear: “5 min rotation doesn’t seem enough, I think 10 min would be more appropriate”. A couple of tips on rotation times in a pair/mob: Shorter rotation cycles help with uncovering friction with switching. If it takes long enough to switch, you’ll be inclined to extend the rotation cycle and rotate less often. There’s a better intervention than that. Think, instead, how you can reduce switching costs, which, as a byproduct, would enable shorter rotation times. If you’re making big changes, it’s less likely you’ll be able to make it within a rotation, so you’ll be inclined to extend the rotation cycle and rotate less often. There’s a better intervention than that. Think, instead, how you can make a given change in smaller steps, where each of those steps is deployable to production. As a byproduct, that would enable shorter rotation times. The pain causing you to consider extending the rotation cycle is very likely pointing to an existence of a deeper problem. Solve that one instead. [this is general advice for any technique involving timeboxing]
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
A little over a year ago a thought became stuck in my brain. How much time would it have taken to build a replica of a 19th century log workshop from scratch? I know what you are thinking. "Justin, people build log cabins all the time, it's not that big of a deal." And you know what? This statement is mostly true. If I pop on Instagram or YouTube, there is no shortage of folks building log cabins. But who is building MY local cabin style? Anyone? I'd wager that is not happening. You know why? Because it's really hard work! I have taught myself how to use axes in the same way the early settlers did, by doing. Were my first hewn logs great? Nope. But they did help me to understand the process and that is the thing. Now my hewn logs look great. Nobody understands company culture if they don't live it. Nobody understands the role they accepted if they don't take part in the process. Remember when you hire someone to fill a role the organization must come alongside the new person and show them the ropes. It's hard work to onboard future teammates, but the payout is a more stable teammate who will be there when you need them!
To view or add a comment, sign in
9,316 followers