Local help · confirmed scope · clear next stepCall code: TG-WEB

Tech Help Day

One scheduled visit. Multiple small tech problems solved.

Tech Help Day is for apartment buildings, condo/HOA communities, senior communities, coworking spaces, and small offices that keep hearing the same tech complaints: Wi‑Fi, printers, devices, camera apps, smart-home setup, popups, and “can someone just look at this?”

Where this wins

Perfect for places where tech questions keep repeating.

The goal is not to cram risky repairs into a hallway. It is to create a safe, professional path: quick fixes where appropriate, clear next steps where not, and recurring support when the pattern is obvious.

Apartment, HOA, and condo buildings

Resident Wi‑Fi questions, printer help, move-in tech setup, smart devices, cameras, and common-area network questions.

Senior living and community groups

Patient help with tablets, phones, printers, TVs, video calls, Wi‑Fi, scam/pop-up concerns, and family-safe notes.

Coworking spaces and offices

Member Wi‑Fi, conference-room tech, printers, workstations, front-desk computers, cameras, and network cleanup paths.

What people can ask about

Small tech friction, handled calmly.

A Tech Help Day works best for everyday problems that waste time but do not need a full construction project.

Wi‑Fi dead zones, router/mesh questions, and device dropouts

Printers, scanners, setup questions, and stuck workflows

Computer tune-up questions, slow devices, popups, and setup guidance

Phone, tablet, TV, smart-home, doorbell, lock, and camera app questions

Plain-English notes, referral links, and quote paths for bigger work

Monthly care or Network Guardian recommendations only when recurring support fits

How it works

1

Host picks the format

A building, board, manager, coworking operator, office, or community contact requests a block: fixed slots, drop-in window, or a small group help table.

2

Scope stays safe

Tech Genie confirms what fits: practical device/network help, reports, quote paths, and privacy boundaries. Risky work stays separate.

3

Each person gets the next step

Quick wins get closed out. Bigger issues become a booking, quote, support ticket, report, or monthly-care conversation.

Host-paid block

The building, office, or community pays for a scheduled support window as an amenity or operations cleanup day.

Resident/member-paid slots

The host shares a booking link and residents, members, or tenants request their own small service windows.

Mixed model

A host-paid help table handles simple questions; bigger jobs become quoted follow-up visits or portal jobs.

Why it helps the host

It makes you look helpful without becoming everyone’s tech department.

Property managers, boards, office managers, coworking operators, and community contacts often hear the same tech requests. Tech Help Day gives them a safe, professional answer: send people to a scheduled local tech support block.

Scheduled block instead of random interruptions
Clear public page to share with residents/staff
Reports, cards, and follow-up links after the visit
Bigger Wi‑Fi/camera/network issues become quotes

Safety boundaries

Sensitive account, payment, medical/customer, access, camera, and private-file details stay out of requests.

Remote access, monitoring, account changes, factory resets, or destructive repair require clear approval.

No life-safety, alarm, access-control, electrical, permitted low-voltage, POS/payment, EHR, or building-system promises outside proper vendor/trade scope.

Bigger jobs, wiring, mounting, hardware, after-hours work, and recurring support are quoted separately.

Good next step

Start with one pilot block.

The first Tech Help Day should be simple: one location, clear scope, realistic slots, and a safe handoff for anything bigger. If it works, it can become a monthly or quarterly amenity.

Suggested first block: 2–4 hours

Best slots: 15–30 minutes for quick help

Bigger jobs become quotes or bookings

Recurring locations can become monthly care

Fast callback

Curious if a Tech Help Day fits your building or group?

Send the location type, rough number of people, common tech questions, and callback window. Tech Genie can help decide whether to run a pilot block, share a booking link, or start with one business checkup.

Keep it short: problem, ZIP, timing, and best callback number.

Keep it practical: symptom, device, room, timing, and urgency. Do not send passwords, Wi‑Fi keys, recovery/2FA codes, payment details, private files, or camera footage.

Plan a Tech Help Day

Request a planning slot for a pilot block.

Square books the first planning slot under Business IT Support. Share the location type, number of people, common tech issues, parking/access notes, and whether the host or each participant will pay. The actual Tech Help Day block is confirmed manually before anything is final.

Safe intake

Describe the symptom, device, room, and timing — not passwords, codes, or private files.

Human confirmation

A website request is not final until Tech Genie confirms the scope and arrival window.

LA-area mobile service

ZIP code helps avoid bad travel promises and wrong arrival windows.

Call (818) 922-5157Call code: TG-WEB

Need a confirmed Square slot?

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What kind of help do you need?

Pick the closest match. You can explain the details later.

Business IT Support

Office/shop Wi‑Fi, printers, cameras, computers, and recurring support fit.

1 hr 30 min

Larger wiring, cabinet cleanup, camera install, access-point, rack, or business project? Use the quote page so access, parts, downtime, and approval are clear before pricing.Request a project quote.

Not a group location?

Start with normal mobile support instead.

If you just need one home, one office, or one urgent issue handled, use the standard booking flow.