Office
Move Checklist
Thinking
of trying it alone?
Moving
a company is a very complex task. Imagine how much difficulty
and aggravation moving into a new home caused! You can easily
quadruple that trauma if your upcoming relocation in inadequately
prepared for. This checklist from Techrepublic.com offers
some sound advice for I.T managers that want to tackle the
task alone.
| Planning
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| Physical
planning and mapping |
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Request
a detailed copy of the floor plan that includes proposed
furniture orientation. |
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Review
final space plans, including electrical and furniture
placement. |
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If
modular furniture is being used, run the network cabling
before the furniture is installed. |
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Determine
PC and printer locations in the new space. |
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Determine
the location of fax machines in the new space. |
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Identify
personal printers on the floor plan. |
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Identify
analog lines on the floor plan. |
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Determine
jack locations (on the furniture plan) for voice and data. |
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Obtain
bids for wiring (once floor plan is approved). |
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Check
to see if the doorways, access hallways, ramps, and the
elevator doors are wide enough to accommodate your moving
equipment. |
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| Teams |
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Decide
if you are going to use a moving consultant. |
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Establish
move teams. For each team leader, establish a backup in
case the original team leader is unavailable. |
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Desktop
team: Break down unused PCs and equipment and rebuild
in the new location Or contact a computer relocation company
like PcDisconnect. |
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Testing
team: Visit each workstation after it's assembled and
verify that everything is operational. |
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Printer
team: Install and configure all printers. |
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Backup
team: Take responsibility for the data (perform backups). |
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Network
team: Build racks and configure switches and routers. |
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Review
space plans and jack locations for all equipment with
team leaders. |
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Create
an outline for each team member and vendor, as needed. |
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| Labeling |
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If
you use both analog and digital phone and network lines,
make sure that everything is clearly labeled with an "A"
for analog, "V" for digital phone lines, and
"D" for network lines. |
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All
wiring should have permanent labels at both ends with
information like room plate and jack numbers. Post a set
of floor plans next to the patch panels with all of the
room numbers and wall plate locations clearly identified. |
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Label
computers, boxes, binders, switches, keyboards, mice,
etc., with destination information like room numbers and
office locations. The information should be detailed enough
so that whoever is installing the items can place them
without having to ask where they go. One idea is to use
different colored labels for each major location at the
new office. At the new location, place the appropriate
colored labels on the doors, door frames, and cubicles.
If the building has several floors or wings, put groups
of labels at intersections, stairwells, and elevators,
with arrows pointing the way. |
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| Cleaning |
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Moving
is a good time to give your computers, keyboards, and
monitors a good cleaning. Just prior to or right after
the move, open the computer cases and blow out all the
dust with a reversible vacuum cleaner. Use a compressed
air bottle for keyboards and a safe screen cleaner for
the monitors. |
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Wiring, cabling, phone, and Internet access |
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Schedule
wiring according to the construction timeline for newly
built structures |
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Identify
the telephone and data cabling closet/room within the
space. |
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Identify
the server location on the floor plan. |
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Verify
that the location of the server room is centralized to
avoid the 100m Ethernet UTP length limit. |
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Confirm
minimum requirements for the server room, including room
dimensions, electrical requirements (30 amp dedicated
circuit), floor coverings, HVAC with alarm and separate
thermostat, and dedicated space for tech equipment only. |
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Evaluate
cost and lead time in providing additional electrical
service in the new location. |
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Test
all network and phone drops as soon as possible. This
should be done before the arrival of any equipment. |
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Test
all power outlets using a tester as well as plugging something
in. |
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Map
the locations of the new desks-or new locations of existing
desks-with your office manager(s) and use a mapping tool
to estimate your cable sizes to avoid too-long or too-short
cables. |
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Plan
for extra wiring drops. Put at least two to four drops
on every wall of an office space. Run four strands of
Cat5/5E cabling to every wall and terminate with RJ45s
in a wall plate. In the computer room, group the four
strands that correspond to the four jacks on the wall
plate and then punch everything down on Cat5/5E patch
panels. |
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Be
sure the backup batteries for phone switches and servers
are all accounted for and installed according to schedule. |
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If
you have an 800 number, make sure your vendor is aware
and ready for the cutover date and time. Test the new
phone line several days before the move, leaving some
cushion time for problems. The more complex the routing
programming is on your 800 numbers, the more time and
testing you need. |
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Disconnect
all leased lines, such as T1s, at the old location. |
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Review
programming/routing on the voice mail system. You may
need to make changes there. |
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Determine
what type of Internet access is available at the new location.
(Note: Lead time for a T1 line is often six to eight weeks.) |
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If
you have to change your ISP, you must also plan to change
the DNS resolution for your company's Web addresses if
you host it internally. If you change ISPs you'll have
a change of IP addresses, so you will have to register
the change with the DNS registry companies and time it
right so that service is interrupted as little as possible.
If your server IP addresses are not updated with the new
DNS information, then Web and e-mail servers will have
problems. |
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Equipment |
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Inventory
existing equipment and hardware, including computers,
monitors, printers, modems, servers, surge protectors,
fax machines, data cables, network switches, copiers,
firewalls, and the DMZ port. A disconnect and reconnect
company like PcDisconnect can manage this for you. |
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Evaluate
the need for new equipment. |
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Make
a note of the lead time required for new orders to be
filled. |
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Donate
or make a plan to properly dispose of equipment that is
going out of use. |
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Often,
laptop users who disconnect their PCMCIA network cards
will leave them behind. Be sure you have spares at the
new office. |
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Review
service calls for the past year and identify likely-to-fail
parts. Have several of those parts on hand. Have spare
cables and hard drives on hand. |
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Have
a physical backup (bootable media) for all servers. Plan
to transport the backup media separately from the truck
moving the servers. It's not a bad idea to have two copies
in two separate cars. |
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Meetings and special communications |
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Identify
key contacts at new and old locations. |
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Prepare
a list of contact names, phone numbers, pagers, e-mail
addresses, and cell phone numbers and distribute the list
to all responsible parties. The list should include property
management contacts, local telephone company, long distance
telephone company, local computer support vendor, local
telephone system vendor, telephone/data cable vendor,
shipping representative, and Web site Webmaster. Store
a printed copy in a safe, easily accessed location, like
your car. |
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Ensure
that the local staff contact will be onsite for deliveries
or vendor access to the space prior to office opening. |
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Establish
and inventory every telephone number to be moved. |
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Schedule
a meeting with the local telephone vendor. |
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Schedule
disconnects or additions of phone lines. |
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Transfer
any ISDN lines. |
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Make
sure that there are at least three analog lines available
in the office on the day of the move. |
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Schedule
activation time for new site. |
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Reconfirm
move date with all vendors one month prior to move. |
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Have
a team meeting to confirm roles and responsibilities. |
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Update
all pertinent information with your company's backup alarm
system, office security systems, etc. |
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Remind
users to back up their own files onto the network or disks
before the move. |
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If
any reconfiguration is necessary at the new site, script
all steps whenever possible. Test the steps before the
move. In writing this list, assume that end users will
be doing the changes and make the script foolproof. |
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Script
the shutdown steps of all equipment. |
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Check
to see that service contracts on fax machines, PCs, servers,
copiers, etc., are not voided if someone other than the
contractor moves the equipment or preps the equipment
for moving. |
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