Posts Tagged ‘cloud computing’

FAR launches new hip hop video for April 1

Monday, April 5th, 2010

By the time you read read this quick break from my more serious articles, I’ll be in Egypt on business. But I hope you all had a chance to check out FAR’s April Fool’s Day video and press release last week highlighting FAR’s decision to diversify it’s IT services portfolio by introducing rap music recording and production. If you haven’t seen it, it’s worth watching for my cameo scene alone!

Be sure to read the press release and check out the Studi-O website for more details!

Going to VoIP: But what about service, continuity and upgrades?

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

This is my fourth and last article in a series on VoIP and unified communications. Having talked about the key terms, how to put together a basic evaluation checklist, the offerings, price and value, in previous articles, I’m going to talk a bit about what else is important — those considerations that are difficult to quantify and calculate, but that should still play a role in every purchase decision.

In my pervious articles, I talked about FAR’s decision to host our own espresso machine. When we decided to buy our own espresso machine to save money, we didn’t look at the cost of getting our beans wholesale and buying a coffee roaster. Not just because it wouldn’t go with the office decor. It also wouldn’t have made business sense.

A business should decide what is really integral to your business and what is not, and buy the tools that are integral to success, but consider renting the nice-to-haves. For most small and medium organizations, it makes sound financial sense typically to buy an on-premise phone system; if they have concerns about maintaining it, they can outsource the support and monitoring to a business like FAR. Just putting the suggestion out there!

Think about the service.
Where the espresso metaphor becomes a little problematic is in the question of service. I tried having Vince (my CMO) make espresso for me, but it just wasn’t the same as seeing a smiling, happy barista. On the other hand, if I want an espresso at 2:30am, I just phone him and get it delivered. He knows who signs his cheques (no, seriously, I would never phone Vince past 11pm for something that small).

But imagine a coffee shop where the line-up may be really, really long one day, and short another. The barista may be very nice and knowledgeable or very apathetic depending on the day. Having your own machine in the office means you can make your espresso when you want, and if you make it yourself, you know the service is going to be spectacular. Now, multiply the important of good coffee by the urgency of the most business-critical system you have, your phones.

The problem with making a business decision based purely on service is that it’s often difficult to determine what level of service you’ll be able to expect consistently from a provider until after you’re signed up. If you’ve ever signed a long-term service contract, you know that the quality of service doesn’t always hold up over time and that you rarely find out until it’s too late. Business should be careful to research their service providers to ensure that they are not just committed to good service but transparency in their business dealings.

With an on-premise solution, you have much greater control over service. You have the choice of hiring internal resources to manage your system. Or you have the choice to hiring an IT managed services firm like FAR.. Or you can rely on the vendor’s professional services and support organizations. Or you can do all three to solve specific problems. It’s entirely up to you, and you can make the decisions you think best for your business. With hosted VoIP, you’re one customer among potentially hundreds vying for the same resources when the system goes down, and your ability to draw in additional resources if often extremely limited.

Don’t believe everything you hear about disaster recovery
Many hosting providers tout disaster recovery as a key feature of their VoIP offer. At FAR, we take security, continuity, failover, redundancy, robustness and recovery very, very seriously. When it comes to disaster recovery, we advise our customers that what’s important is to have a comprehensive plan that protects their corporate data, their network infrastructure and their most valuable resources: their people. Disaster recovery is critical.

But it’s worth noting that any good on-premise VoIP system should provide redundancy and disaster recovery. Adtran’s NetVanta’s solution does and at a fairly reasonable cost. Also, keep in mind that the disasters that can happen to your business can also happen to your hosting provider’s business and the lines and cables in between your business and their business. Hopefully they have a lengthy disaster recovery plan of their own. If you do decide to use a hosted service provider, be sure to ask about this.

If up-front capital expenses are a problem, think about leasing an on-premise system
Even though the business case for an on-premise system is strong, many small and medium businesses want to get their feet wet with VoIP first before they make a long-term buying decision. This is understandable, but businesses should know that leasing an on-premise system is also an option, depending on the reseller. Leasing is a lot like renting, and there are economic advantages and disadvantages, but it can sometimes help your business to better structure costs.

Prices are also decreasing generally. The old, fairly expensive PBX systems of just 10 years ago are coming down rapidly in terms of their pricing, and typically, PBX replacements like Adtran’s NetVanta are even less expensive. There are free, open-source solutions. However, these often require a fair amount ofprofessional services and support to make them operational. The nice thing about a solution like NetVanta is that it’s inexpensive, very quick to install and deploy, and there’s a lot of end-user productivity functionality out of the box. In any case, businesses don’t have to buy Cisco or Avaya just to get a reliable PBX or PBX replacement anymore.

Remember, the features these days are more in the software, less in the hardware
In theory, a hosting solution provides a clear and compelling argument in terms of delivering new features when compared with a traditional hardware PBX, but in practice, this isn’t as good as it sounds. A hosting provider can deliver new features at any time – if the hosting provider deems it appropriate, if it fits with their business model and if they hardware and software decisions they’ve made allow for it. There are no guarantees, and the features available today and down the road may vary substantially based on the technology your VoIP solution provider puts in place.

With Adtran’s NetVanta UC Server on other, similar, software-focused solutions, to get a powerful new phone system with the latest features, we just upgrade the software. It’s very cost-effective and simple. Yes, we’re dependent on the vendor to add new features, but NetVanta’s software also provides a service creation environment. We can build our own phone-based applications whenever we want. The system is mostly drag and drop and it easily hooks into corporate databases.

So, should you host or not host?
What FAR recommend to clients is that they come in for a demo of Adtran’s NetVanta UC Server before they make a decision. If they like it, then they get a very powerful, very cost-effective phone system that really opens the door to individual and organizational productivity that empowers every employee in the business. If they don’t, then worst case, they get a free espresso and are able to make a clear and informed business decision based on the available options.

And if they come in to talk about VoIP, I also talk to them about their network, their security, their Website, their email and, most important, how information technology relates to their business process and how FAR can help them with all of those things. A phone system is just one business tool in the information technology arsenal these days.

In my next couple of articles, I’ll be talk about some of these technologies and whether putting them in The Cloud makes sense. Be sure to check back!

To host or not to host your VoIP?

Tuesday, January 26th, 2010

At some point, every business makes a purchase decision about a phone system.  As one of the communications tools most critical to a successful business, which phone system to buy is one of the most important business decisions your business will make. These days, lots of small and medium businesses are trying to decide whether to move to VoIP. If they do want to move to VoIP, a lot of them are trying to decide whether it makes sense to put their phone system in The Cloud (with a hosted VoIP solution) or to keep it on-premise.

The question these days is: which VoIP solution is right for my business? Not always an easy question to answer. In some cases, the choices are very complicated, and this series of articles intends to help small and medium businesses make good decisions.

In my last two articles, I talked a bit about The Cloud and what it means for small and medium organization. This article continues a series that articles that advises small and medium businesses on what to host and what to keep on premise, and how IT managed services fits into the mix. I’ll be answering questions about whether to host a VoIP phone systems with its own small series of four articles, starting with some basic terms, and then moving through some discussions in terms of evaluate price and value. I’ll end with a summary of key buying criteria to help you make an informed decision.

What’s a PBX and what’s a PBX replacement?
My very first phone system was a Betamax waiting to happen. Some of you probably remember the Betamax (Sony’s competitor to VHS). It was the HD-DVD of the video cassette world. It was a technical marvel, technically superior to VHS in many ways, except the ways that customers seriously valued. From a technology standpoint, Betamax was a great technology. From the standpoint of general customers, it was an overpriced and under-featured solution to the problem of recording home movies.

As a technology, public branch exchange systems (PBXs) are similar. PBXs were a great technology in the 1970s. But in terms of today’s business communication needs, a PBX is fairly one-dimensional and not the broad communications solution most business need. The first corporate phone system I ever bought was manufactured by NEC. It was a traditional PBX, which sat in a closet. It was fairly expensive. It did provide consistent and reliable dial-tone to the desk phones in my office, but in terms of helping me and my team effectively respond to customers, helping to manage my email, faxes, cell phones, customer data, and so on, it didn’t do all that much.

Today, to keep it simple, “the PBX” is rapidly evolving from a particular kind of device to a term that describes a solution to the problem of business communication (with a focus on voice communication). Some vendors refer to their offerings as PBXs, some as soft-PBXs, some include their PBX capabilities within “unified communications”. Some refer t their offerings as PBX replacements. From an education standpoint, the product category is a big mess.

My current phone system is a VoIP soft-PBX with unified communications. That means instead of using regular phone lines, it uses the Internet, and instead of being a specialized computer that sits in a closet, it’s software that sits on a Microsoft Windows server in my server. How things have changed! They’re poised to change even more over the next decade.

“VoIP-enabled unified communications”: a lot of syllables for a lot of benefits
As complicated as choices have become, the news is good for customers. Businesses no longer have to wed themselves to hulking, closet-monster PBXs for 5-8 years, paying 10s to 100s of thousands of dollars just to get dial-tone to desk phones, locked into the same brands of phones and other peripherals. Prices for a phone system are rapidly decreasing and more and more offerings come with value added software (e.g., unified messaging, instant messaging, service creation, and a lot of other things I’ll be explaining in the articles in this series).

Suffice it to say, there are a number of different “PBX replacement” technologies. Some of them are network devices similar to routers. Some of them are purely software. Some of them are PBX systems with VoIP capabilities. Sometimes they’re called PBXs, IP-PBXs, SIP-PBXs depending on the specific offering. It all depends, and that’s part of the confusion when trying to make a purchase decision. The PBX replacement that FAR uses is called NetVanta Unified Communications Server (made by ADTRAN). It provides VoIP-enabled unified communications (you can learn more about NetVanta here).

Voice over Internet Protocol-enabled unified communications (VoIP-enabled UC) and the perhaps even more onerous “communications enabled business process” (CEBP) are a lot of complex syllables to describe basically three things:

  • A phone system that uses the Internet and similar networks to make and take calls (the VoIP part); it makes network architecture a little simpler, provides a single point of management and it lowers costs on your phone bills.
  • Productivity tools that help employees respond their customers by phone, fax, email, IM and other tools more quickly, more intelligently and more professionally (the unified communications part). UC helps small and medium organizations look bigger.
  • Organizational productivity tools that tie communications systems into back-office databases to help business as a whole work more effectively with customers (e.g., imagine a package tracking system that allows you to enter your package PIN and get an update on its delivery over the phone – that’s CEBP).

Easy, right?

What businesses really need to know is that today, almost all business communications solutions, whether voice, fax or data, should be a part of your information technology plan (that includes email, fax, instant messaging, operator consoles, call-routing, etc.). It’s no longer necessary (or advantageous) for these to be separate purchase decisions. Now that you have some ideas on the diversity of offerings to replace your PBX and some of the key terms, I’ll be talking about how to prepare your business to be VoIP-ready. Watch this space!

The Far Cloud: Giving Clients One Back to Pat

Friday, January 15th, 2010

In my last blog, I mentioned “The FAR Cloud” and I talked a bit about what that means to FAR’s customers. In this blog, I’m going to address the concept in greater detail by explaining what FAR does as an IT managed service provider.

What does “IT managed services” mean?
One of the most common questions I’m asked is: what does FAR do? Most people already know that FAR does something IT related, but information technology is an extremely wide field. There are multiple layers and lots of niches. Historically, most IT firms have specialized in one of a handful of things.

Some IT firms focus on “consulting”, which typically means improving desktop and organization productivity. Some IT firms focus on technical support, and some on custom programming. Still others focus on rolling out and maintaining networks and core infrastructure systems. These are just broad categories, with lots of specific niches (for example, some IT companies focus entirely on setting up, maintaining and troubleshooting their clients’ connections to the Internet).

In contrast, IT managed services firms take a different, more end-to-end approach. IT managed services often includes everything from high-level consulting to very brass tacks technical support and monitoring. As my Chief Marketing Officer says, IT managed services firms provide customers with one back to pat. That’s really what FAR does and part of what sets us apart: we provide small and medium-sized businesses with one back to pat for all of their information technology needs, whether it’s a security audit and analysis, a network implementation, business analysis consulting, or a new laptop.

So, what’s the FAR Cloud?
In my last blog, I discussed the value and hype of cloud computing. I’ll be discussing what to host and what to put in The Cloud in a string of articles over the next few weeks. Cloud computing takes the information technology complexity out of the business premises and moves it to the Internet; FAR takes all of the IT complexities off of our clients’ shoulders, regardless of where the information technology actually sits.

As a managed service provider, FAR provides a cloud of its own so to speak. As far as our customers are concerned, whether a server sits in their server room or is virtualized somewhere on the Internet, FAR makes sure that it works as expected, that it is monitored 24/7 and that it is continuously improved. To use the industry jargon, FAR does the operations, the administration, the management, the provisioning and the troubleshooting (the OAMPT for short) for most of our clients’ IT systems, end-to-end.

Some of our clients have internal IT resources, but most do not. I would say that many of FAR’s clients don’t have an IT team, but that’s not true: that’s the service that FAR provides to them. FAR is their IT team. The FAR Cloud simply refers to the carefully planned, executed and monitored package of information technology software, hardware and software that FARs plans, put into place and then monitors in order to help our clients meet their business challenges.

The FAR Cloud includes doing everything from fixing mice and sound cards when they break, to making sure that servers don’t melt, to network rollouts, to unified communications and voice over IP systems, to making sure the network is secure, and more. “One back to pat” means that if our customers have a business process or information technology challenge, we help them to solve it in a way that’s transparent, but also doesn’t require them to master a lot of technical details. That’s the FAR Cloud.

What’s in it for customers? It’s all about values
The value that IT managed services firms provide to customers it that they (should) take all of that complexity off the customer’s plate, create a solution, put it in place, monitor it, make it work and improve it over time. That’s what the FAR Cloud provides to customers: all of the benefits of an enterprise-level IT solution at a reasonable cost with none of the complexity: peace of mind, the best possible value in terms of meeting their business requirements, and the strongest possible footing for continued growth. If you’re working with an IT vendor who’s not providing that to you, FAR definitely can!

But I’m not just going to say it and hope for the best. Over the next several articles, I’m going to be sharing many of FAR’s insights into what to host and what to keep on premise in terms of your business systems. I’m going to be blogging about how to work with your customers more securely, how to keep your costs low for your email systems, how you can get the most value from a VoIP phone system, how to make unified communications an integral part of your business and a lot more. Be sure to watch this space regularly!

What “The Cloud” means to us earthlings

Monday, January 11th, 2010

The Cloud

First, what is The Cloud?
The Cloud simply refers to information technologies that are externally hosted or otherwise “virtualized”. For example, your Web site is probably hosted through an Internet service provider. It’s in The Cloud. If you’re using Gmail for email, your email is in The Cloud. If you have “hosted VoIP” or “hosted Microsoft Exchange”, then that means your most business critical tools are in The Cloud. If you use SalesForce.com, Autotask or other software as a service (SaaS) offerings, you’re using The Cloud.

For IT pros, The Cloud is just a new way to refer to a general trend in computing (usually referred to as cloud computing) over the last 20 years to move computing resources and applications off-premise. For businesses, using The Cloud means that they don’t have to worry as directly about administering, managing and provisioning the hardware and underlying software for those applications (along with some up-front savings). There’s nothing especially new about The Cloud (except for the recent round of hype).

Is The Cloud really gaining momentum? Reality bites.
I don’t want to rain on anyone’s parade, but The Cloud is still a fair amount of unrealized potential and, analysts and vendors aside, a source of confusion for us earthlings. That doesn’t mean The Cloud isn’t useful for some applications. It is. It’s just that small and medium business owners need to be careful to set their expectations accordingly and that IT professionals need to do a better job of educating customers about what the benefits and pitfalls of The Cloud are.

It’s always difficult to predict when a way of managing information technology is going to gain critical mass. Sun declared that the network was the computer in the 1990s. If you read the press at the time, we were all going to have thin-clients on our desks. Corel was converting Word Perfect to JAVA in anticipation of a swing in the market. Things didn’t turn out exactly as expected, did they?

That’s not unusual. Lots of good technologies and good ideas never transform the market. But that doesn’t mean The Cloud isn’t gathering momentum this time around. There are good reasons to believe that there is some truth to the hype about The Cloud. Security, bandwidth, decreasing costs for computing resources and other factors are looking very good for The Cloud, but there are rarely any guarantees with information technology. For now, The Cloud is still on the horizon, and FAR is advising clients to take a wait and see approach unless they have very compelling business reasons to switch to The Cloud.

What should small and medium businesses put in The Cloud and what should they keep on premise?
This is always the most difficult question to answer. It depends on the business. It depends on their costs and business model. It may even depend on the types of customers they service (their verticals). At FAR, we work with customers to put the right solutions in place for their needs. More and more, small and medium businesses, even if they have IT teams in place, need that kind of help from a company like FAR. What is important is using the right tool to meet the right challenge, and using the tools at your disposal (whether they’re in The Cloud or in your server room) in ways that work for your business.

But really, what should and shouldn’t small and medium businesses put in The Cloud?
Most companies can divide their information technology into two key groups: user productivity and related business systems (e.g,. their customer relationship management applications, their project management applications, and so on), and their core infrastructure applications (e.g., Microsoft Exchange, their VoIP phone system, their network and so on). These are general categories and some products straddle both.

The Cloud is sometimes a good way to address the needs of the first group. For example, FAR uses Autotask to manage its professional services automation. We love it. I love it. FAR also hosts a lot of our clients’ Web sites through a virtual Web server provided by an ISP. So, these are both in The Cloud.

The Cloud is often a bad (bad as in costly and potentially dicey) way to manage the second group (core infrastructure products). E-mail, phone services and unified communications, for example, are typically so critical to many businesses and so expensive to host over even a 2 year period that putting them in The Cloud doesn’t make much sense for many small and medium businesses. FAR hosts its Exchange and VoIP phone system on-premise for this reason, as do the majority of our clients.

What key factors should businesses consider?
The Cloud and on-premise solutions are not mutually exclusive ways to solve business problems. They are two different but increasingly related tools to solve the challenges many businesses face. There may be overlap between the two in the same business process.

For example, when I wrote this blog, I wrote it using Microsoft Word on my desktop computer. Then I uploaded it as an attachment to an Autotask project for the proofreader (into The Cloud). So, even though I didn’t write the document in The Cloud, we used The Cloud during the process; now that I am publishing it to this blog, the content is officially in The Cloud again.

Even though we could have used Google Docs to write the blog (and so, used The Cloud from beginning to end), we won’t be switching to Google Docs any time soon. Why not? Microsoft Office provides us with the right cost/benefit ratio and the features that we need. That’s really the best way to make a decision about what to put in The Cloud and what not to put in The Cloud: does it make financial and business process sense?

Beyond that, there are a number of factors to account, but the big questions are usually: What are the costs? How important is this information technology to our business? What level of service does this application require? In some cases, cost-wise, it may make sense to rent an application (in The Cloud), and in some cases, it makes sense to own (on-premise). In some cases, the business system is simply too critical or too complicated to put in The Cloud and an on-premise solution makes the most sense. In other cases, the level of service provided by an external service provider can’t match your business expectations or requirements. The answers to the questions will vary from business to business and from application to application.

The FAR Cloud
As a managed service provider, FAR provides its own “cloud” to our customers (The FAR Cloud, so to speak). We take the business challenges our customers face and put in place a seamless solution that combines on-premise and virtualized products and services with our boutique level of planning, execution, support and monitoring to meet their business requirements and to provide continuous improvement. We make sure that everything just works together.

That’s really the value that good information technology planning and execution provides (whether it’s in The Cloud, on-premise or a combination): reasonable peace of mind at reasonable cost. What FAR provides customers is that peace of mind extended to the whole of their information technology requirements. Over the next several blog entries, I will be giving you some of FARs most common answers to these questions and how The Cloud can be an effective part of your business.