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How Superstorm Sandy Affected Virtual Offices & Ecommerce

<p>Weather patterns are changing&period;  We’ve all seen&comma; felt&comma; and commented on how the weather is &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;strange&period;”  Most recently people across the nation have seen and witnessed firsthand nature’s wrath&period;  This change in weather has brought disastrous storms and played havoc on people’s lives and livelihood&period;  In May 2011&comma; it was the EF5 tornado that swept through the Midwestern city of Joplin&comma; MO&comma; and most recently it was superstorm Sandy&comma; which hit the eastern seaboard the end of October 2012&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;It’s devastating to all those involved when disasters hit&period;  We see the devastation and heartache placed upon individuals&comma; their families&comma; and businesses&semi; we feel their pain&period;  We see how individuals are affected&comma; but how are virtual offices and ecommerce affected from such storms as Sandy&quest;<br &sol;>&NewLine;<strong>Difficulties Arise<&sol;strong><br &sol;>&NewLine;Technical companies seem to weather most natural storms with ease&period;  When one server location is down another&comma; in a different location&comma; takes over and when employees aren’t able to make it into the &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;office” they work remotely with a laptop&period;  But it was different this time&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;<strong>Modifications Made<&sol;strong><br &sol;>&NewLine;With widespread power outages&comma; those affected by the storm and working in virtual offices had to seek locations that had power&period;  People worked from their homes&comma; their friends’ homes&comma; their relatives’ homes&comma; and just about anywhere they could as long as there was power and the Internet&period;  Customers were notified of possible delays due to the storm&comma; and notices were made on business websites&period;  Finding this commodity to carry on with business as usual was half the battle&period;  Roads and subways were flooded making travel difficult&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;Enterprises with ecommerce platforms that were able to operate via remotely and later after their power was reestablished continued their e-business pretty much as normal&colon;  orders taken&comma; payments received&comma; correspondents made&period; Where it wasn’t as easy was in the shipping and receiving end of the business&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;<strong>Physical Complications<&sol;strong><br &sol;>&NewLine;The physical aspect of e-businesses may possibly have been the most affected and by far the hardest to get back to running normally&period; The storm put a halt to warehouse production&period;  Inventory couldn’t be received nor shipped&period; Warehouses were shut down&semi; warehouses lacked everything it took to conduct business&colon; power&comma; Internet&comma; and workers&period; Although&comma; it was reported that some of the e-commerce warehouses were able to conduct business by running on generators and flashlights&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;However&comma; for the most part&comma; when warehouses were up and running again&comma; they were behind&period; Hosted shopping cart orders continued coming in&comma; but not necessarily out&period;  Orders were handled as fast as possible&period;  Many workers were known to have worked double shifts to in order to get orders out&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;<strong>Resilient<&sol;strong><br &sol;>&NewLine;People persevere through thick and thin&period;  They survive&period;  They make do and they come back stronger than before&period;  People have come together trying to put their lives back in order and will do what it takes in order to make that happen&period; That’s exactly what ecommerce businesses plan to do as well&period; Holiday shopping is just around the corner and they hope to participate as they had planned&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;Cathy Crilley West is a freelance writer who writes on a multitude of subjects&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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