Notes from the President

Ken Hilton - President Red Wing Software

Almost every Tuesday morning, I have the opportunity to join our amazing support team for a short meeting. We discuss recent issues they’ve helped customers with and ways that we might be able to make our customer experience better. We may talk about tweaks to the software, a better process to accomplish a task, or a recent common problem with an operating system update and how to help our customers solve it.
At a recent meeting, one of the topics was about an issue with ransomware. Ransomware is a malicious program that infects a computer by opening a file or clicking on a link in an e-mail that comes from an unrecognized source or may have even been forwarded by someone you know. This program typically prevents access to information on the machine until you pay a ransom to the individual that created the virus. The alternative is restoring a backup from a time before the computer was infected.
I bring this up to point out the importance of keeping your antivirus software and operating system up to date with current versions. As older versions of operating systems and software are phased out and not supported by the authors, the updates that include code that attempts to prevent these attacks are no longer available. The cost of keeping your technology (hardware and software) up to date is far lower than the cost of recovering from malicious activity.
As you create your budget for the year (which should be complete for 2020 by now) in addition to the normal budgeted items, you should include a line item for keeping your technology current.

Notes from the President

Ken Hilton - President Red Wing Software

As I write this, we are approaching a very important date in the history of the United States. This may sound a little strange at first, but I choose not to celebrate the 4th of July. Don’t get me wrong, our offices will be closed and I will be taking the day off. However, I will be celebrating Independence Day, it happens to be on July 4th.

I feel we have developed a tendency to recognize, observe, and celebrate dates rather than the events that made the dates important to us. So, while I think it is important to remember the special events that happened on a date, it is even more important to recognize why that date is important.

These thoughts can carry into your business management, as well. Every day, week, month, and year we run a variety of financial reports to track how our business is operating. We look at a Balance Sheet and get a snapshot of the financial health of our business, but do we dig into it and determine what actually caused the changes on this report? We run an Income Statement, P&L, Statement of Farming Activities, or Statement of Revenue and Expenditures (depending on your type of organization), but do we take the time to drill down and determine why the business is heading in the direction it is?

Every country and business has events and reports that they recognize and review at certain times of the year. Let’s make it a point to remember the reason we are running these reports, and especially the reason we are celebrating these dates.

- Ken Hilton, President