October 17, 2004 Sponsored by Gateway
Ron Tulacz, director of data processing for LaPorte County, Ind., describes his jurisdiction as "just a simple county government." But there was a time when keeping county workers productively employed on their computers wasn't simple at all.
Located in northern Indiana, LaPorte County is home to nearly 110,000 residents spread across 598 square miles. Like governments everywhere, it relies on information systems to help it deliver essential services to citizens. About 350 county employees working in multiple buildings use applications that run on servers, desktop computers and notebooks. When these don't work, they can't do their jobs.
Unfortunately the county couldn't always rely on support from its technology vendors. One time, for example, the county had a problem with a server. The vendor refused to make things right. "We fought for nearly a year on that thing, about whether the problem was with the software or with the machine," Tulacz said.
Members of vendors' technical support staffs often didn't credit Tulacz and his team with the ability to diagnose problems. Instead, they questioned their assessments and asked them to walk through procedures they had already performed. When vendors agreed to replace parts under warranty, those parts took two or three days to arrive. While they waited, LaPorte's IT staff had to scramble for backup solutions to keep employees productive.
Service Partnership Built On Trust
About six years ago, LaPorte County started buying computers from Gateway. Today, Gateway is the county's exclusive supplier for servers, desktop PCs and notebooks for a wide variety of government applications. Along with high-performance hardware, the partnership brings the county a level of service and support that no other company has been able to deliver.
Tulacz is especially pleased with Gateway's technical support program, which makes hardware repairs easy and fast. "They have allowed us to do the diagnostic work and tell them we need a hard drive, CD drive or whatever," transmitting the information via e-mail, he explained.
Gateway also dedicated a technical support agent to its customers in Indiana, giving them a single point of contact for all problems and questions. The agent forged a personal relationship with each customer, so he understands the extent to which professionals such as Tulacz can analyze their own hardware problems, and he knows when he needs to step in with further help.
At Gateway, technical support agents "don't belittle you by asking you to repeat things you've already done," Tulacz said. "If we tell them we did it, they accept that and go on, and we take care of it."
Now, the process of repairing malfunctioning hardware is quick and trouble-free. "If we have a problem," Tulacz said, "we put it to them and they address it. The next thing you know, it's taken care of without having to scream and holler and get upset."
When Tulacz and his staff need a replacement part, "we fill in the blanks on the form, and if we do it by noon one day, usually the UPS man carries it in the next morning. We don't have to prove the validity of our diagnostic work. Gateway just sends the parts out. They include an RMA (return merchandise authorization) number, so we just box up the old part and send it back to them."
Aside from always knowing where to turn for help, LaPorte County gains another advantage from buying all its hardware from Gateway. Components from machines manufactured at about the same time are interchangeable, so as computers reach the end of their life cycles, Tulacz can mine them for spare parts. "I can switch back and forth and piece them out," he said.
Close Connection, Quick Resolution
Gateway's marketing team gives LaPorte County the same kind of personal attention as its technical support