If you need help filling the pod-for example, if you’re moving your whole home, you may have some heavy items which you cannot lift by yourself-you can request movers to help you. Even though you may also arrange to hire your own movers, or have your pals help if you have helpful friends, you can also contact the pod company simply because they have contracts with various moving companies to help you.
Once you fill your pod, the organization will move it your brand-new home. No matter if you are moving across time, or else you are moving across the country, the pod company can move your pod quickly. Because the pods are simple to move, it is less expensive to move a pod than it is to employ a moving truck.
Another common use of moving pods is for storage. When you have a lot of things and want to make some room, or those that are moving to some smaller home but aren’t prepared to purge a lot of their goods, pod storage is a great solution. Pods could be stacked for storage, making it an inexpensive storage solution.
Make sure that while you pack your pod, you’re making sure the items inside are packed safely and securely. The pod will be moved and the items could shift. Delicate items ought to be packed carefully in a fashion that shifting the pod won’t lead them to break.
Moving pods really are a simple, cheap, and convenient solution for your moving needs.
Many virtual assistants start out charging an hourly rate. This can raise some challenges:
- Clients often have a hard time perceiving the value they receive for that rate each hour they’re charged.
- How would you justify an increase in your rates?
I’ll call this client “Cindy.”
Cindy and her va happen to be cooperating for nearly five years. Cindy had her assistant do a number of task for example submitting articles, scheduling blog posts, following up by email with contacts, delivering newsletters. Originally the virtual assistant charged per hour rate that included all these tasks. The assistant had to track her time, right down to the minute, and send in a monthly accounting showing how she used time. She’d then bill Cindy for another 10 hours.
Following a couple of years the va realized she could get more done if she did not have to track every minute of her time. She’d come realize time it took to get each of these tasks done which she could get them done more proficiently if she charged by project instead of the hour.
So she proposed a change to Cindy in how she’d bill for services. Rather than hourly she’d now charge a flat rate for every article submitted, another predetermined fee for scheduling blog posts, another project fee for sending out the bi-monthly newsletter.
This could free up the virtual assistant’s time since she no more needed to track her hours. Cindy would know what it really would cost her each month to get these tasks done and she’d know precisely what she was getting in return. It allowed Cindy to produce a budget and not wonder if her assistant was running out of hours.