Virus Removal/PC Tune-Up Process

Thanks for the advice...I really appreciate your insight...my scripting process is usually the beginning and it is not always done...i always follow with the manual removal at the end or sometimes just have not other option but manual removal before i can run any scans...there is never a sure shot "This is how to remove a virus" method. I will definitely keep you posted as to how the next 6 months go...Current store opened august 1st of last year so pretty excited about the 2nd location...Started incorporating some malwarebytes/avira software packages into our virus removals and now we are offering a monthly data backup service (which i was sketchy about at first, but surprisingly was a hit). We have gotten burned with a few of our advertising choices, but the current ones have really paid off. Always trial and error in the world of advertising
 
Thanks for the advice...I really appreciate your insight...my scripting process is usually the beginning and it is not always done...i always follow with the manual removal at the end or sometimes just have not other option but manual removal before i can run any scans...there is never a sure shot "This is how to remove a virus" method. I will definitely keep you posted as to how the next 6 months go...Current store opened august 1st of last year so pretty excited about the 2nd location...Started incorporating some malwarebytes/avira software packages into our virus removals and now we are offering a monthly data backup service (which i was sketchy about at first, but surprisingly was a hit). We have gotten burned with a few of our advertising choices, but the current ones have really paid off. Always trial and error in the world of advertising

Sorry I didn't notice your begining date. Good luck with the second location! So tell us about your advertising. (I know that's a different section, but we're all over the map today) What ad choices burned you? What in your opinion works the best for you? It's very interesting the volume that you have in such a small area. I need to look up the demographics. Perhaps a lot of boomers?
 
New to the Site & Forums

Since I just signed on today... a newbie to this site, I've spent most of my day reading through the forums. Just finished this whole thread...

Personally, I've found that some viruses can be removed remotely (done manually using the Admin account), others are infected to where we have to remove the hard drive and run the programs while drive is attached to a testbench computer, and then other times the infection is so deep that the removal of the infection has messed up the operating system and requires a full reinstall. Thank God we ghost the drives first.

I love working on computers and providing a service to our clients. When I give a computer back to a client I know that I have done my best to have it running to the best of my ability and it's capability, and I provide suggestions on how we can improve it/upgrade it.

Our in-shop rate is $120 for a complete virus removal and tuneup, and our on-site hourly rate is $135 Hr. We are not trying to compete for the low end market. We rather keep busy with on-site business client projects.
 
Reading through most of this, it seem to me the conflict between techs is mostly with pricing and scripting. As for pricing: I'm not sure how most of you are set up but I have an office built onto my home. No employees, almost no overhead. I live in a very low income area and the cost of living is cheap. This is how I can keep my rates so low and still make a decent living. I'm not trying to get rich off this. The average job here pays maybe $8 per hour so you can see that my $35 per hour is not bad at all.

As for scripting: There seems to be two schools of thought going on here. On one side we have the guys who think you must manually do every single thing for it to be done right no matter how mundane. The other side seems to think almost everything can be automated. I tend to see things more from that side. I'd say around 60-70% of what I do to a system could be automated. Lets see, Run AFT Cleaner, Ccleaner and PureRA. Run Malwarebytes, Superantispyware and a few other malware detectors. Startup Lite. Sure I can run all these manually and it take maybe 5 mins. and get the scanners up and going, but whats wrong with pressing a single key to get the ball rolling since these are things I do on every system? Sure I go back with auto runs and Hijackthis to see if I missed something. I may even have to dig into the reg manually but these times are few and far between. The above procedure combined with chkdsk /r and a defrag will take care of a large % of computers unless there is a hardware or rootkit issue.

In general I think the people who like to go digging around in the reg manually do so because it looks more impressive. These are the same types who use the cmd line for moving files when they could simply drag and drop.
I suppose the manual only guys also manually delete all the reg entries left over from removed programs? It would be fun watching them manually delete the 900 some odd entries left over from office or the 94 entries left by Nero. When doing a tuneup and setting options you could manually do every single thing and it take 20-30 mins or use a reg script and do it in 30 seconds. The same options settings will be made regardless and I don't run the risk of forgetting something.

At the end of the day it should be about giving the customer back a clean healthy PC at a fair price and not about how complex you can make it. The PC they get back from me will be as clean or even more clean than the one they get back for Mr. manual/cmd line and I can have it back to them in far less time.
 
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Reading through most of this, it seem to me the conflict between techs is mostly with pricing and scripting. As for pricing: I'm not sure how most of you are set up but I have an office built onto my home. No employees, almost no overhead. I live in a very low income area and the cost of living is cheap. This is how I can keep my rates so low and still make a decent living. I'm not trying to get rich off this. The average job here pays maybe $8 per hour so you can see that my $35 per hour is not bad at all.

As for scripting: There seems to be two schools of thought going on here. On one side we have the guys who think you must manually do every single thing for it to be done right no matter how mundane. The other side seems to think almost everything can be automated. I tend to see things more from that side. I'd say around 60-70% of what I do to a system could be automated. Lets see, Run AFT Cleaner, Ccleaner and PureRA. Run Malwarebytes, Superantispyware and a few other malware detectors. Startup Lite. Sure I can run all these manually and it take maybe 5 mins. and get the scanners up and going, but whats wrong with pressing a single key to get the ball rolling since these are things I do on every system? Sure I go back with auto runs and Hijackthis to see if I missed something. I may even have to dig into the reg manually but these times are few and far between. The above procedure combined with chkdsk /r and a defrag will take care of a large % of computers unless there is a hardware or rootkit issue.

In general I think the people who like to go digging around in the reg manually do so because it looks more impressive. These are the same types who use the cmd line for moving files when they could simply drag and drop.
I suppose the manual only guys also manually delete all the reg entries left over from removed programs? It would be fun watching them manually delete the 900 some odd entries left over from office or the 94 entries left by Nero. When doing a tuneup and setting options you could manually do every single thing and it take 20-30 mins or use a reg script and do it in 30 seconds. The same options settings will be made regardless and I don't run the risk of forgetting something.

At the end of the day it should be about giving the customer back a clean healthy PC at a fair price and not about how complex you can make it. The PC they get back from me will be as clean or even more clean than the one they get back for Mr. manual/cmd line and I can have it back to them in far less time.


Good post. It's all about happy customers and earning a living from it :)
 
Exactly...I have had an extremely satisfied customer base and and a pool of referrals from those customers...I am recommended by other businesses in the area as the service performed is great (So low cost doesn't equal low quality service). The Point in the end is your customers and making a living like martyn said...I I have happy customers and make a great living doing it...As far as advertising goes...I do a weekly talk show in the mornings that has worked great for me...it is a tech talk show where i give tech tips and field tech questions...The other end of it...the regular radio ads...are not worth the money unless you have an unlimited pool of money to spend on the advertising...I like callthatgirls idea with the billboard, not sure how that will work for me but am interested to give it a shot...I think social marketing (Email campaigns, facebook, twitter, etc.) is amazing and works well...We do specials and promotions on facebook and it was been beneficial for us...So yeah there are alot of ways to advertise but you just have to give them a shot and see if they work for ya
 
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