Baskets are Good for Business

April 29, 2021

There’s a reason why baskets have been around for centuries. From babies to bread, our prehistoric ancestors understood how useful baskets are for carrying, storing and transporting just about anything. Sometimes the simplest solution is the best. Thousands of years later, we’re still using baskets to transport our groceries and store our laundry. Just as baskets help make chores and shopping faster and more efficient, it turns out baskets are good for business too! Whether you’re offering in-person training, managing a distribution centre or facilitating vaccinations, if your operational process includes sharing devices, our Basket system provides multiple benefits. PC Locs slotted device Baskets enable hand-out and pack-up of devices in less time, giving you more time to focus on operational goals.

Top 5 Ways Baskets Benefit Business

    • Save time: Enable hand-out and pack-up of devices in less time
    • Prevent breakages: Keep devices more secure in public spaces
    • Streamline distribution: Easily carry multiple devices between classrooms, workrooms or buildings
    • Save cash: Reduce money spent on broken or stolen cord replacements
    • Future-proof: Transport a wide variety of devices, including laptops and tablets or devices with extra-thick cases

Distribute Devices in a Matter of Seconds

“We have limited time with the participants, so being able to grab a smart device Basket and placing them on a table give participants immediate access to the devices. I can do that in a matter of seconds which meets our need tremendously.”

– Gene Howell, Manager for Educational Technology at Australian Institute of Management in Western Australia.

 

The Australian Institute of Management in Western Australia (AIM WA) is dedicated to building leadership and management capability. Their suite of training courses attracts over 20,000 participants each year. Most classes require each participant to have immediate access to technology. There’s no time to waste distributing shared devices.

Slotted device charging Baskets by PC Locs make device deployments more efficient, allowing for quick distribution and collection by the trainer. At AIM WA, iPads are stored and charged in Carrier 30 Carts in Baskets of five. When it’s time to set up for each class, the trainer slides open the secure Cart lid, takes out a couple of Baskets, and places them on tables for each participant to grab. Participants no longer have to wait in line then take out a device one by one as they would with a traditional cabinet-style laptop cart. When students start learning immediately vs. lining up, 70 hours of class time is saved per year.

Reloading the Cart is a simple three-step process:

Step 1: Put devices back into technology Baskets with their charging ports facing up

Step 2: Place Baskets into the Cart

Step 3: Plug charging cords into the devices

Cords that stay in the Cart dramatically reduces the number of broken, misplaced and stolen cords. In addition, Carts can be easily wheeled between classrooms to safely and quickly distribute devices where they’re needed most.

Facilitate Healthcare on the Go

The COVID-19 pandemic is driving demand for healthcare providers to go on the road to facilitate healthcare. Where there’s a testing and immunisation event in the field or a mobile health clinic, there’s a need for devices and a way to charge, store and secure them.

FEMA’s Community Vaccination Centers Playbook recommends 100 iPads for facilities distributing up to 6,000 vaccination doses a day. These devices can be used for patient registration, scheduling and clinical documentation. At COVID-19 testing stations, staff members can also use iPads to scan patients’ insurance information quickly.

Whether sharing a hundred devices or a dozen, Baskets are an efficient method to speed up device deployment. At the start of the day, a worker grabs the Baskets from a secure Carrier Cart and sets them out to be easily accessed by the nursing teams. During their shifts, nurses return devices to the Baskets as a centralised, safe place to store them when not in use. At night, all devices are placed in Baskets which are then placed into Carts for charging.

Because baskets are removable, Carrier Carts offer an open-concept that adapts for healthcare providers on the road—making them the ideal solution for mobile blood banks and clinics. The fleet of vans operated by the Community Blood Center (CBC) travels throughout Kansas and Missouri fully stocked with everything necessary for a blood donation procedure. When each van moves multiple laptops, tablets, keyboards, wireless printers, webcams, and all of their power supplies, the task can be pretty daunting.

The blood bank needed a “mobile device kit” that could easily charge, store, secure and transport a wide variety of mobile devices and all necessary power supplies. They found success in the PC Locs Carrier 40 Cart. Because of the open-concept design, they removed half of the Baskets and retrofitted their own padding and shelf to accommodate their unique needs. Read more about how Community Blood Center of KC went mobile with blood bank and devices here.

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