Recent Articles
-
Six Money Mistakes Most Solution Providers Make
Six Most Common Mistakes The majority of solution providers find there’s little money left once they cover operating and capital costs and payroll. That leaves many unprepared for the next evolutionary change in technology. According to Howard Milove, a financial planner with Access Wealth Planning, here are the six most common mistakes made by such…
-
Study: Automation the Answer for MSPs
Although solution providers are entering the managed service arena in droves, those who want to grow and thrive must count on automation rather than increased headcount as a business strategy, according to a Managed Service Provider (MSP) Benchmark Study released by San Mateo, Calif.-based managed services vendor Untangle this week. “The most compelling and interesting…
-
Facing Managed Services Reality
<!–[endif]–> There appears to be something fundamentally amiss about the way solution providers are going about building their managed services practices. And what that something is becomes pretty apparent when you take a look at the results of a study conduced by the Pacifica Group on behalf of Untangle, the makers of a security appliance…
-
Yahoo Channelizes to Battle Microsoft, Ichan
Yahoo is getting bossy in its battle to stave off Microsoft’s takeover ambitions. According to published reports, Yahool is launching its “build your own search service” project—or BOSS—through which it will partner with third-party search engines to take share away from Google. In other words, Yahoo is building a search channel. It’s an ingenious solution…
-
CDW IT Monitor: IT Staffing, Budget Outlook Brighter
The past two months have seen IT executives grow increasing bullish about the future of their organizations, according to the results of the most recent CDW IT Monitor, a bimonthly survey that gauges IT budget management and spending plans and tracks the perceived value of business technology. The CDW IT Monitor index, which debuted in…
-
Microsoft Revamps Partner Program
Solution providers who want to rise to prominence in Microsoft’s partner program will need to sharpen their technology focus and prove their business and customer-service mettle under new program rules being drafted by the software maker’s channel executives. The program changes coincide with an organizational realignment this week that split Microsoft’s U.S. Partner Business into…