Is your company too big?
I had a run-in with a potential customer recently. At The Backup Plan, we provide backup services as a managed service that IT solutions providers can offer to their customers. So, we approach companies that off IT support and say, “Hey, you, yeah, IT support provider…do you have a backup offering? Oh, you do, does it do versioning and imaging and continuous data protection and replication and disk to disk…” and so on. 1 in 10 listen and 1 in 10 of those sign up and offer our services to their customers. 10 in 10 of those are satisfied with their decision. 1 in 100 of those like it so much that they start their own backup plan service and stop paying us for it. What?? Yes, I’m serious.
Anyway, my real point is that there are even a few IT solutions providers that we have approached, or who have approached us, that already offer backup services. The most recent was so striking because it is a nationwide chain…and…THEY OWN a BACKUP provider?!!!? Seriously, they bought a company for millions of dollars and offer backup services through that company. But they are interested in using us to offer the same services. And when I asked about the service provider they already own, they drew a blank. Like, didn’t know about it. So the SCal regional management has no knowledge of all the offerings of the parent company. But hey, I’m not one to turn away business. I wish someone would buy my company. Any takers? $3 million and it is yours. And, I’ll we’ll all even continue working for it for a year…cannot beat that. OK, I’d only sell to the right shop, but if there are companies that are so big that they do not realize that they already own an offering, it really makes you wonder about the wisdom and waste of dealing with some large companies. More on this later. It has me thinking.
Backup News Roundup, March 2010
The Computer Technology Review posted an article by Eran Farajun of Asigra about backing up via the cloud. Asigra, not surprisingly, offers cloud-related backup and recovery services. Itdoes point out that it doesn’t really make sense to just use your old backup model and point it to the cloud or even offsite. Thearticle also also points at virtualization as an important recover path.
NovaStor has launched a SaaS aimed at the end user. Their new Storageline.com is a site that provides free local backup software and connects you to their network of Offsite backup providers, where you can pay for remote backups. the only problems….well, for one, Vembu announced pretty much this model with Vembu @ Home a while back, and two, NovaStor is too expensive…most of their resellers are charging in the $2.50/gig per month range. MSPs and Resllers through The Backup Plan can beat that.
Google has announced that all Google Apps customers now benefit from a totay top-notch and enterprise-level backup system, Google Advanced Backup, which is how they can guarantee 99.9% uptime. Makes you wonder, though, if they announced this today…what did they have before this?