Byte-Size Tech Videos

Sitting on a Powder Keg: What CEOs Must Address in Their IT Landscape – Part Four
By Farica Chang, Managing Principal “Don’t click on suspicious links.” If that’s the extent of your company’s cybersecurity training, you might as well tell your employees not to get scammed. The truth is, while your IT team has been repeating the same cautionary tales, cybercriminals have been engineering increasingly sophisticated

Woman-Owned and Women-Led – Anderson Technologies
By Amy Anderson, Founding Principal Anderson Technologies, a division of Anderson Archival, is proud to announce that we are certified as a Women’s Business Enterprise (WBE) and a Women-Owned Small Business (WOSB) through the Women’s Business Enterprise National Council (WBENC), the nation’s leading third-party certifier of businesses owned and operated

New Year, New IT: 5 Essential Tech Resolutions for Your Business
By Farica Chang, Managing Principal Learning a new hobby? Clearing out the garage? Finally putting that gym membership to use? It might come as a pleasant surprise that while you’re laying out your New Year’s resolutions, you’re also helping set your business up for success in the next 12 months.

Building Connections: How Local IT Support Boosted One Church’s Community Impact
By Farica Chang, Managing Principal Personal connections can spark real change—for community hubs as well as the people they support. Here’s what happened when one of our team saw the chance to give back. How It Started: A Partnership Built on Trust For churches and nonprofits, serving the community is

Holiday Cheer from Anderson Technologies
Here’s a cheerful snap of part of our Anderson Technologies and Anderson Archival team celebrating the holiday season together! We missed quite a few of our crew as they were traveling or onsite for projects this week! Our Christmas wish for you is that the joy and teamwork we share

Sitting on a Powder Keg: What CEOs Must Address in Their IT Landscape – Part Three
By Farica Chang, Managing Principal Key in the right combination of letters in May 2016, and you could’ve gained access to the Twitter, Instagram, and Pinterest accounts of one of the founding fathers of social media. Turns out, even Mark Zuckerberg wasn’t safe from account compromise—or the consequences of not