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  Home Page › Software & Networking › Mobile Computing Systems
   
 

What's in Your Laptop at Trade Shows?

   

I used to think there was no privacy on the Internet because if folks can hack the FBI and the CIA, surely they can hack TradeShowTraining. The question is - why would they want to get into my site. What you see is what you get there is no hidden information or agenda.

But now I have different concerns. Its not hackers going into servers to rip off data and details despite top-flight security measures.

Its ordinary folks who are being sloppy with corporate information that may affect you directly.

INTERESTING - According to a recent survey by Ernst & Young LLP: 74% of the respondents ... reported losses resulting from a security breach over the prior two years. ... and yet E&Y just reported a breach of its own a laptop stolen from an employees car containing 243,000 records of Hotel.com customers.

The US Dept of Veterans Affairs reported 26.5 million records stolen from an employees computer at home. The employee was not supposed to have these records, but apparently had been working on them at home for three years.

WHAT DOES THIS HAVE TO DO WITH TRADE SHOWS? You know your electronics have a higher chance of being stolen when you travel. You try to take normal precautions so you dont get ripped off but thats not the point.

This is Important Do you have information, records and other data that --

(1) You are not supposed to have?
(2) Is legitimately yours but is sensitive?
(3) Could compromise security if stolen?
(4) Provides competitive intelligence?
(5) Is not easily replaced or replicated?

Im not speaking of social security, credit card numbers, and personal data that would be used for identity theft. Lets look at critical corporate information that should not see the light of day outside of certain departments.

At a trade show, you probably have customer records, quotes, presentations, deals you are working on, your address book. e-mail and personal information you think is hidden but a good hacker can easily interpret.

Just as I advise clients to clean out their wallets to the bare minimum and pack sparingly, so too, do I advise you to strip down the laptop. This is especially important if you plan to use your laptop as a demonstration piece in the booth. You don't want to give prospects access to everything.

Accidents happen. Thefts occur. But if you are caught empty handed because your laptop with critical information especially info you are not supposed to have is missing --- well..... You design the appropriate response and punishment for you.

Author: Julia O'Connor
 
Author Bio:

Julia O'Connor

In one way or another, Julia has always been in sales. From the time her mortified mother found out that, as an enterprising 5-year-old, she was peddling homemade pot holders to the neighbors, to her current expertise in trade show marketing, she has been interested in results. And in order to get the results she wants, she will guide, train and teach.

Her careers range from public and professional education design, to freelance advertising-public relations, to real estate investment portfolio management.

Since 1982, Julia has been working with clients in trade show marketing. And, when she asked clients, "why are you going to that show?", she found most did not know. Time to teach.

After years of informal instruction, Trade Show Training was incorporated to provide structured training ranging from trade show basics to the ergonomics of exhibit design. She designed Camp Sho-M-Sel-M to improve sales staff performance in the trade show environment.

She holds degrees from The University of Georgia in Advertising, an MA in Mass Communications from The University of Iowa, and an Indiana University MBA in Marketing. She is a frequent speaker on marketing, networking, entrepreneurship and trade shows.

This article can be searched using: mobile computing software, history of mobile computing, mobile computing white paper
 
 
 

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