Archive for the ‘Marketing’ Category

Vembu @ HostingCon2010

by gokul on July 20th, 2010

We are at the HostingCon 2010 in Austin, Texas and the atmosphere here is fantastic. We are excited about showing off the latest in Vembu StoreGrid for service providers.

Check out our booth #326, we’ll be showing off the latest in our product for managed hosting providers. A very good reason to do this is because Jay, our VP of Storage Services will be around to take questions on online backups and the latest in storage technology.

1) In the ‘latest’ category, the Flex Light interface for desktops and laptops is currently in beta and is soon to be released for production use.  This is based on Adobe Flex for a snazzy user interface. You can download the Light Client for StoreGrid v3.1 over here.

2) Also, StoreGrid now sports Connectwise 2010 PSA integration for easy monitoring for service tickets.  We are also working on integrating with WHMCS, AutoTask, TigerPaw and Level Platforms!  Download the early beta here.

3) For our Hosting Provider partners, we are working on Plesk and cPanel integration for easy management of backups.

4) Currently StoreGrid supports virtual environment backups. We are integrating with VMWare and HyperV APIs for more comprehensive backup & recovery features for virtual machines.

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Drop by our booth to register for early preview beta of these features.  Booth Number: 326
Hope to see you in Austin – at our booth or around the Convention center!

The above post was written by Gokul Sriram of Vembu Technologies. Vembu Technologies is a backup software vendor whose product, StoreGrid, powers the online backup services of a large number of service providers across the globe. Besides remote backup, StoreGrid is also used for on premise backups of workstations and servers at various companies & universities.

Vembu Home is the only FREE consumer backup solution for free local backups and optional Amazon Cloud backups. Get your FREE COPY now.

Retro games making a ‘new’ comeback – in Google logo

by lenin on May 21st, 2010









Somewhere down my memory lane, I remember playing PAC-MAN as a coin operated arcade game. Can you imagine playing the PAC-MAN game in the Google logo? You can do that today and tomorrow in the special Google ‘Doodle’ that is out.

This special doodle was created in the honor of PAC-MAN’s 30th Birthday, where you can refresh some of your old 8-bit memories and play PAC-MAN in the Google’s first ever playable doodle. You can start playing the game by clicking the ‘Insert Coin’ button on the home page of the Google or wait for few seconds for the game to start automatically. One more item to note here, Google has managed to remove the ‘I’m feeling lucky’ button, where one of our old prophecy came true, atleast for the next 48 hours.

The PAC-MAN game has not done really bad either – it has kept up with the latest technologies. Since it initially made its appearance as an arcade game, it has made its appearance in PC, XBOX, PSP, and iPhone and now in the Google logo. This leaves me to expect a multi-player Cloud based PAC-MAN game for the PAC-MAN’s 31st Birthday. With Cloud Computing, I can visualize these cloud based retro games in the near future.

For Managed Service Providers, who would like to play PAC-MAN on the Google logo, enter the code ‘Online Backup Software’ on the Google Search box and then press the ‘Insert Coin’ button, aloha! your game is on!

Hurry up! This is only for the next 48 hours, then the ‘I’m feeling lucky’ button will come back and put you out of luck!

Google's new doodle PAC MAN

Google's new doodle PAC MAN

The above post was written by Lenin Srinivasan of Vembu Technologies. Vembu Technologies is a backup software vendor whose product, StoreGrid, powers the online backup services of a large number of service providers across the globe. Besides remote backup, StoreGrid is also used for on premise backups of workstations and servers at various companies & universities.

Vembu Home is the only FREE consumer backup solution for free local backups and optional Amazon Cloud backups. Get your FREE COPY now.

RIP – Floppy Drive, Will the Tape Drive soon follow?

by lenin on April 28th, 2010

RIP - Floppy Drive, Will the Tape Drive soon follow?Finally the day has come where people are no longer in need of Floppy Disks nor do they even care about its existence.  Floppy Drives enjoyed nearly three decades as a popular and ubiquitous form of data storage and data transfer medium from the mid 1970s to the late 1990s. Yes, we all at one point of time used Floppy Drives and praised it usability when there was no alternate solution at that time which was cost effective and reliable. Now they have been largely superseded by USB Flash Drives, External Hard Drives, DVDs and Memory Cards.  Many companies realized its fall and dropped Floppy drives from their products with Apple leading the way in 1998, Dell following in 2003, HP in 2009, and the latest being Sony that bid farewell to 3.5 inch Floppy Disk .

Now, I see a similar pattern with Tape Drives. Well…Tape Drives were once regarded as a long term data storage medium primarily for archiving purposes as it is relatively inexpensive and afforded a reliable way to store data for the long term. But is Tape sufficient for today’s data protection and archival needs where restoration of data during a crisis has to be be done in near real time? Businesses require effective and reliable Data Backup and Disaster Recovery mechanisms that can guarantee data recovery in near real time to assure business continuity in the event of a major data disaster.

Listed below are some of the major disadvantages of Tape based backup solution according to CRC Data Protection.

1)      Time Consuming
2)      Vulnerable to damage, theft or loss
3)      Unprotected
4)      Inefficient in managing and administering large data backup sets
5)      Platform Dependant
6)      High Recovery Failure rates as high as 20 – 50 percent, making it an unreliable form of data backup.

One more important thing to note here is the trend that both Floppy Drive and Tape Drive share amongst themselves.

Do you see that trend there? The above insight was captured from Google Insights and it has the innate ability to capture the rise and fall of a product in the market.

In today’s market dynamics, the total cost of ownership for tape based backup or archiving is much more than using Disk Drives. On top of that backup and restore from/to tape drives can consume a huge amount of time. Tape Drives, unlike completely automated disk based online backups or on-premise backups, requires lots of human intervention to periodically put in the new tape and replace & label the old one, and if not properly done, might end up in serious data loss.

The above post was written by Lenin Srinivasan of Vembu Technologies. Vembu Technologies is a backup software vendor whose product, StoreGrid, powers the online backup services of a large number of service providers across the globe. Besides remote backup, StoreGrid is also used for on premise backups of workstations and servers at various companies & universities.

Vembu Home is the only FREE consumer backup solution for free local backups and optional Amazon Cloud backups. Get your FREE COPY now.

Mulling over the Minnows

by sathish on April 21st, 2010

Smaller Customers can sometimes fetch you more than what you anticipated

While the U.S. and the world economies are still trying to come out of the economic crisis, companies have been trimming their work force. The luckier employees who still have their jobs intact now spend much longer hours at work, making up for the reduced work force. It has not been easy for the business owners either. A survey conducted by Grant Thornton International (http://www.gti.org/Press-room/stress2010.asp ) found that 76% of the business owners have reported increased stress levels over the last year, majority of them citing economic climate and increased work load as the reason for it.

In such a global environment, it is only natural that the companies now look at their investments and try to adopt newer ways to reduce their excesses, introduce more efficient processes and improve their ROI. Among the frenzy of changes, one of the knee jerk reactions for businesses would be to scale down their services/expenses towards their smaller customers while focusing primarily on their larger partners. Jennifer Walzer ratifies this in http://boss.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/03/11/can-we-afford-to-continue-serving-small-clients/

But is it really that simple? Can one just sift away the minnows? Consider also this:

Smaller companies are nimble. They adapt to changes much better. They spend their resources carefully and efficiently. Small companies can therefore weather the bad economy better than some of the larger ones. This means they probably would continue to remain as your customer even when economy conditions are worse.

Peter Bergman in his blog: http://blogs.hbr.org/bregman/2009/03/why-small-companies-will-win-i.html makes a very interesting point. According to him one important factor that makes it possible for smaller companies to thrive better, especially when economy is bad, is trust. According to him, customers prefer smaller companies because it is  easier to trust them. This factor could actually fetch the smaller companies new opportunities from their large competitors. This might be an important factor and you could expect your smaller customers to actually grow. And you grow when they grow.

In tough economic conditions, you cut marketing expenses and look at organic growth for your business. You might just not have enough resources to aggressively pursue larger customers. But it might not be a bad idea at all to reach out to smaller customers, sign them up one at a time and earn their trust. These small customers can then be the catalyst to spur your organic growth further within their community without you have to significantly increase your marketing expenses.

Therefore, take another look at your smaller customers. Runs some numbers and see if they really are consuming 70% of your resources while fetching only 30% of your revenues. You may be surprised to discover the opposite. Not to sound cliché, but you could admire the mammoths but please also give some credit to the ants – after all they are still around with us.

The above post was written by Sathish Subramanian of Vembu Technologies. Vembu Technologies is a backup software vendor whose product, StoreGrid, powers the online backup services of a large number of service providers across the globe. Besides remote backup, StoreGrid is also used for on premise backups of workstations and servers at various companies & universities.

Vembu Home is the only FREE consumer backup solution for free local backups and optional Amazon Cloud backups. Get your FREE COPY now.

The Path to SMB customers – a Treasure Hunt

by lenin on April 6th, 2010

Path to reach SMBs - Treasure HuntReaching out for SMB customers has more or less become like a treasure hunt for IT Industry folks. We know that there is a pot of gold at end of the tunnel. But the real problem is that we may not have the treasure map – the right path that will lead us to them.

Why it is difficult to reach SMBs.

Every adventure trip has its own challenges. SMBs are typically run by tight entrepreneurs, who are conservative in terms of budget and may not venture out into adopting new technologies without getting absolutely convinced of its ROI.  SMBs are slow adopters of new technologies and require expert assistance on lots of IT-centric business solution areas. Despite these problems, every IT vendor wants to crack the SMB market by spending lots of marketing money ($$$) in online advertising and other mediums trying to reach the SMBs directly – Hold On! – Is that the right path? Truth is, even the mighty Microsoft and Dell realized that the effective way to reach out for SMBs is through the Channel.

Why Channel Partners have an upper hand with SMBs.

The Channel Partners, also known as, IT Service Providers, Managed Service Provider, Value Added Resellers and System Integrators etc… provide an effective way to Garden the IT requirements of SMBs and are in the best position to service them. The SMBs who don’t have the necessary resources in terms of time and money in managing their in-house IT rely on a trusted service provider who can act like their internal IT department. This local trusted service provider is in the best position to understand the SMBs business and provide the most suitable and cost effective IT solution and tailor them to to suit the customer’s business goals.

Only the local service providers can be the link between the vendors like us and the SMBs because they are in the best position to understand the SMB customers business needs to deliver the most relevant and cost effective IT solution by providing the necessary service in terms of the installation, training, on-going maintenance and support.

With that said, we may conclude that the best way to crack into the SMB market is through the channel!  But even for the service providers, there are many challenges  in growing their business – Let’s explore it!

Are the Service Providers always successful in reaching out to SMBs?

Most of the Service Providers consider ‘Marketing or Selling’ their services to SMB customers a critical pain point. Even though the service providers mostly do relationship selling to their SMB customers, there still seems to be some challenges in marketing relevant IT solution to them.  Mentioned below are some quick tips that might help the service providers to identify some common mistakes and areas of improvement in their marketing activities

• Service Providers are prone to overstuff customers with loads of information and technical specifications, while what businesses look for is a solution that will make their task of running their business easier. SMB’s don’t have time to sift through marketing materials and pages and pages of descriptions. A marketing message to SMBs must be simple and straightforward.  This point is succinctly put by Justin Crotty, Vice President Services North America at Ingram Micro Inc., in a guest blog post titled “Managed Services: The Value Is the Service” at the MSPmentor.

• The Pain Points for SMBs is how to sign up more new customers thus increasing the revenue and also how to reduce their operating cost . Focus your marketing message on these Pain Points and show how you can either help them  improve their process of signing up new customers or  how you can help them reduce their operating costs.

• Focus on how you are going to implement a solution and its impact on ROI instead of how exactly the product or service functions. For example if you are marketing an online  backup solution to your customers, one thing that you need to focus on is how backing up to an off site location is better in terms of protecting critical business data and also how the total cost of ownership is much more attractive than a traditional backup solution.

Avoid buzzwords like cloud hosting, Grid Computing etc…, many a non-IT domain SMB may neither understand nor care to learn

• Include customer testimonials on all your marketing messages demonstrating on how a local business is benefited from your service. This will have a notable impact on your marketing efforts.

Like every adventure trip, the path for reaching out to SMBs is full of traps and pitfalls. If you discover the right path you can win big.

The above post was written by Lenin Srinivasan of Vembu Technologies. Vembu Technologies is a backup software vendor whose product, StoreGrid, powers the online backup services of a large number of service providers across the globe. Besides remote backup, StoreGrid is also used for on premise backups of workstations and servers at various companies & universities.

Vembu Home is the only FREE consumer backup solution for free local backups and optional Amazon Cloud backups. Get your FREE COPY now.

Only the local service providers can be the link between the vendors like us (http://www.storegrid.com) and the SMBs because they are in the best position to understand the SMB customers business needs to deliver the most relevant and cost effective IT solution including providing the necessary service in terms of the installation, training, on-going maintenance and support.