Have you written a business plan/model or did you throw together a few clients that you knew of to form this endeavor. There are a few things you and your colleagues should determine as soon as possible.
What line of support to offer (PC, Server, Networking)?
What level of support per line offered?
Best response time to an issue? Meaning from time of intial call until time to first adressed by support staff.
What is your oncall or work schedule for this support company?
How are you charging your clients, hourly, monthly fee, hourly w/retainer, etc.?
All of these issues should be discussed with your partners. You will still have to do some negotiation with your clients after you lay out the business but it will make service objectives eaier to manage. If you cannot meet their expectations or unclear about what service you are providing, you will not have this extra business for long.
Unless a business critical app or server dies during the day, most small buisinesses won't have a problem waiting until afterhours for PC support and server maintenance.
Here's my recommendation:
If you want a few side jobs to get some extra money, divide the client list up evenly and provide support to your list. If you want a business doing this, quit your jobs and do it.
Hunger is a great motivator.
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