Don’t
Let the Grinch Ruin 2012 for Your BusinessBy Siamak
Farah
The famed children’s fable, How the Grinch Stole Christmas,
tells the story about the Grinch who attempts to ruin the holidays from the
children of Whoville by stealing their gifts and decorations. As in most
fables, the Grinch’s diabolical plot is foiled. If only it was that simple in
the real world.
2011 has been challenging for most small to medium businesses
and business in general will enter 2012 under a cloud of uncertainty. While
some industries are seeing an increase in demand, most businesses are trying to
hold out, awaiting an improved climate. There seems to be little opportunity to
raise prices in a market where customers are demanding lower prices on goods
and services (http://www.infostreet.com/blog/small-business-management/the-economic-squeeze/).
As businesses recognize that 2012 won’t likely see increased
revenues from a raise in pricing/fees, the pressure to reduce costs will
continue to grow.
Despite the fact that there is a large pool of unemployed people,
most businesses have actually seen an increase in their cost per employee. This
has been as a result of reducing staff that are either undertrained or not required
for survival, and in turn providing a raise to keep critical and trained
employees. Not to mention, these key employees have by and large been asked to
fill the gaps created from the reduced worked force.
While on the surface this increase in cost does not seem
logical, it is in fact vital. The loss in valuable, trained employees can have
a long-term negative impact on any business. “The productivity gained by maintaining a well-trained
workforce, even in difficult financial times, can't be overstated. When
machines, desks or computers sit idle, productivity will eventually flatten and
it could be nearly impossible to recover your momentum.[1]
So where is a business to cut? Fixed costs won’t change, we
can be assured of increased healthcare costs, and given the gridlock in DC
taxes remain the great unknown for the foreseeable future.
Talk about the Cloud seems to be the topic du jour today as
it provides a formula for reduced fixed costs, increased per employee
productivity, and a PAYGO model. Yet a survey from ITC service provider found
that 57% of businesses are undecided about
adopting Cloud services[2]. The
reluctance is reported to be centered on concerns for security, reliability,
and a fear of the unknown. The term ‘the Cloud’ might be daunting but in truth,
most businesses already rely on the Cloud for many services (email, online
payments/billing, file sharing, banking to name a few) and employees are using
the Cloud, with or without their employer’s permission.
·
37% percent of workers claim that they’ve used their own PC or
smartphone for work,
·
26% have purchased work-based software or other technology with their
own money,
·
15 % of users have downloaded unauthorized applications to their work
computers in the past year and off those users,
·
67 % have used two to five unauthorized applications for work[3]
As with any critical purchase, security and reliability
concerns need to be addressed by selecting a vendor that has the history,
reputation, and a loyal customer base. In addition, businesses rely on their
Cloud vendors’ security expertise since they often don’t have enough security
personnel on staff, if any, and realize that while it might seem comforting to
keep your cash under your mattress, relying on the expertise of our banks to
manage financial resources is smarter.
Perhaps we need to look at the Cloud as a utility and not as
a product or a service. Years ago, we dug wells for water and fueled our
factories with coal burning furnaces. Now, you turn on the tap and get all the
water you need and plug an extension into the wall and electricity is there. We pay only for the utilities we use,
increasing and decreasing as demand dictates. Think of the Cloud as a wireless
plug for all your computing solutions.
As was noted in a recent article from the Harvard Business
Review[4]: “One simple example is when a service is
needed only 10 hours per day, 5 days per week. The cost of owning the servers
and applications the 118 hours/week they are not in use is not a good
allocation of funds for many businesses. Many Cloud providers allow bringing up
services when they are needed and bringing them down when they are not."
Most small businesses and enterprises don’t require their Cloud provider to
handle voluminous End-of-Month runs that are required for enterprise companies,
but the cost benefits are the same. Take a company that, in order to secure a
new contract needs to partner with another vendor on a one time basis. The
project requires the company to build a new intranet to host the CRM, Knowledge
Base, Conference Calling, and File Sharing to be used by a large team for a
fixed period of time. To purchase these tools would add costs and implementing
them would take significant man hours. Utilizing the power of the Cloud, all
this could ramp up within hours and the company only needs to pay for the apps
needed for the length of the project. And since all the data is in the Cloud, these
partners are not required to be under one roof; they can share the data,
collaborate, and ramp down when the project is done. Your business can compete against
larger competitors for projects without investing significant dollars.
This is the time of year where we are inundated with talk
about gifts: what to buy, where, for how much, and for whom. The Cloud provides
small businesses and enterprises with the gifts of money (reduced costs), time
(increased productivity), mobility (the freedom to work from anywhere, from any
web enabled device), immediacy (you can provision a new service instantaneously),
and control (you pay only for what you use).
The Cloud provides a competitive edge that can make the
difference between a stellar 2012 or a repeat of 2011.
The Grinch from the fable tried to steal the joy from the
Who. Don’t let the hesitant Grinch steal your business’ 2012.
About Siamak
Farah, CEO of InfoStreet
Siamak Farah is founder and CEO of InfoStreet, a
provider of IT and productivity Software as a Service (SaaS) and developers of
the popular StreetSmart business software.
[1] http://www.majon.com/articles/business-industry-economy/business_profit_3361.html
[2] http://clouddb.info/2011/04/07/is-business-reluctant-to-jump-on-the-cloud/
[3] http://smallbusinessblog.infostreet.com/2011/11/benefits-of-cloud-computing-are-we-%E2%80%98on-work%E2%80%99-or-%E2%80%98at-work%E2%80%99/
[4] http://hbr.org/2011/11/what-every-ceo-needs-to-know-about-the-cloud/ar/4