We are proud to spotlight Dwain Daniels, a people-first leader and one of the most trusted faces of the Haber Team.
As Haber’s Customer Success Manager and dedicated customer advocate, Dwain is known for going above and beyond to ensure every client feels supported, heard, and genuinely well looked after.
Dwain recently appeared as a guest on the Joey Pinz podcast, where he shared real-world insights on how small, consistent actions can drive meaningful personal and professional growth. Drawing on lived experience, the conversation explores habits, leadership, and the long-term impact of showing up with intention.
Microsoft Copilot is transforming the way teams work. From drafting and summarising to streamlining everyday tasks, Copilot helps people focus on higher-value work while staying productive.
Haber is offering a free, hands-on Copilot workshop designed to help your team understand what Copilot can do, how to use it safely, and how to get real value from it in your day-to-day work.
Speak to us today to book in your free workshop.
At Haber, we use the Entrepreneurial Operating System (EOS) to bring clarity, focus, and consistency to how we run our business and how we support our clients. EOS is a simple, practical framework used by organisations worldwide to align teams around a shared vision, strengthen accountability, and execute with discipline.
EOS helps us clearly define who we are, how we work, and what matters most. At the heart of this are our core values, which guide our decisions, behaviours, and interactions every day.
Our Core Values: ROCKS
Our values are captured through ROCKS, a framework that reflects how we show up for each other and for our clients.
Relentless Improvement (Driven)
We believe in continuous progress. We focus on executing today while always looking for ways to improve tomorrow. By fixing root causes, learning from experience, and iterating consistently, we aim to deliver better outcomes over time.
Ownership Always (Dedicated and Accountable)
We take responsibility from start to finish. Ownership means being accountable for outcomes, raising risks early, and closing the loop through clear communication and follow-through. Our clients can trust that we see things through.
Critical Thinking (Practice Critical Thinking)
We challenge assumptions and focus on solving the right problems. By asking thoughtful questions, validating ideas with facts, and choosing the simplest effective solutions, we make better decisions and deliver practical results.
Kindness and Connection (Engaging)
We value respectful, human interactions. We invite diverse perspectives, listen with intent, and communicate openly. Strong relationships and mutual understanding are essential to how we work and how we serve.
Share and Support (Collaborative)
We succeed together. Collaboration means pairing up, sharing knowledge and context, and supporting each other to win. We believe in making success visible and helping others achieve great outcomes.
By using EOS and living our core values every day, we create a consistent, people-first experience for our clients and our team. These principles shape how we work, how we make decisions, and how we continue to improve.
Does Turning Your Computer Off Every Night Shorten Its Lifespan?
It’s a surprisingly common belief that shutting down your computer every night causes wear and tear and shortens its lifespan. For many workplaces, this idea has been passed down for years. The reality is quite different.
The Myth
Turning your computer off every night puts extra strain on components and can reduce the life of the device.
The Reality
Modern computers are designed to handle regular shutdowns. In fact, shutting down your device regularly can be beneficial. It clears memory, allows important updates to install properly, and can help resolve performance issues caused by long uptimes.
Today’s hardware is built for far more start-up cycles than most users will ever reach. The normal act of powering down and starting up your computer is not harmful under everyday use.
When Leaving Your Computer On Makes Sense
There are some situations where leaving a device on is appropriate, such as when scheduled overnight updates, backups, or remote access are required. In these cases, sleep mode or controlled uptime policies can balance convenience with performance.
Best Practice
For most users, shutting down your computer at the end of the day is a healthy habit. It helps keep systems running smoothly, supports updates, and reduces unnecessary power usage. If your organisation has specific requirements, your IT team can guide you on the best approach.
The Bottom Line
Turning your computer off every night does not shorten its lifespan. It is an outdated tech myth that no longer applies to modern devices. What matters more is keeping systems updated, secure, and properly maintained.