Why Shred?

As an organization, you need to protect your critical information. On-site shredding is an ideal solution for organizations that need ongoing, verified destruction of sensitive paper documents. Plus, it’s secure, convenient and environmentally-friendly.

Does your business model include a sound strategy for managing and protecting your sensitive information? If your company lacks a coordinated information management strategy, you may encounter:

Space Invaders: You risk crowding your office with file cabinets instead of space for your employees or important business tasks.

Dangerous Inefficiencies: Don’t chase new business without on-demand access to required information.

Wasted Business Intelligence: Records are crucial to your firm’s collective brain, but useless if you can’t find them.

What Are The Benefits Of Handling Your Information Properly?
Preserving Your Customer Relationships
Compliance With Industry Regulations
A Strong Defense Against Legal Challenges

Why Shredding Is Important To You
Paper shredding is an important part of protecting your family, just as much as locking the front door at night. To protect your credit, your privacy, and your customers, homeowners and home-offices need to shred their important documents. Don’t forget; it’s required by law.

Why Shred?
Prevent Identity Theft Or Data Breach

There’s no law preventing people from going through your trash. Your everyday functions around the house can require large amounts of information that could be useful if a thief were after your identity or information. Shredding protects you from identity theft, the nation’s fastest growing crime.

Free Up Space
Sensitive information should never be kept for longer than is necessary. People often shred because they no longer have room to store all of the paper that they have accumulated over many years. Shredding lets you create new space in your home or office, eliminating the hazards associated with overburdened file cabinets and boxes.

Recycle – Save The Earth
Recycling paper just makes sense – and all you have to do is watch your documents get dropped into a secure container. Shredding allows you to turn unnecessary, excess paper into new products, and promote a more sustainable planet

What To Shred?
Anything that has a signature, account number, social security number, or medical or legal information should be shredded.

Examples Include:
Address labels from junk mail and magazines receipts
Bank statements
Birth certificate copies
Canceled and voided checks
Credit and charge card bills, carbon copies, summaries and receipts
Credit reports and histories
Documents containing maiden name (used by credit card companies for security reasons) Documents containing name, address, phone or e-mail address,
Documents relating to investments
Documents containing passwords or PIN numbers
Driver’s licenses or items with a driver’s license number
Employment records
Employee pay stubs
Expired passports and visas
Unlaminated identification cards (college IDs, state IDs, employee ID badges, military IDs)
Legal documents
Investment, stock and property transactions, items with a signature (leases, contracts, letters) Luggage paper tags
Medical and dental records
Papers with a Social Security number
Pre-approved credit card applications
Receipts with checking account numbers
Report cards
Resumés or curriculum vitae
Tax forms
Transcripts
Travel itineraries
Used airline tickets
Utility bills (telephone, gas, electric, water, cable TV, Internet)