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17 November 2008

Thinkgrid offers SME virtualisation on tap

By Maxwell Cooter Techworld

Small businesses have not been using virtualisation as the complexity has proved to be too much for organisations with limited IT skills.

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Now, a British company is looking change that mindset by offering small businesses hosted desktops.

Thinkgrid CEO, Rob Lovell said that the intention was to ensure that small businesses wouldn't miss out on the latest technological developments. "We wanted to put a hosted offering together that would use all the features of a modern enterprise - technologies such as virtualisation, SANs or grid computing."

He added that it had been important to position the company carefully and not confuse them with too much technical terminology. "For example," he said. "They wouldn't really understand terms like on-demand computing."

Lovell said that the company started up some months ago and has been quietly signing up customers ever since. "We got over 500 users accessing the service on a trial basis, the aim is to convert them to paying customers. We've just started charging them and 70 percent have signed up in a month."

Part of the appeal, added Lovell was that by offering a hosted desktop service, companies would be able to experience quite a radical departure. "Most of our users have a traditional PC set-up that they either look after themselves, or have Norman up the road manage," Lovell said.

Thinkgrid hopes that by offering range of services, smaller businesses will start to adopt technologies that could increase business efficiency, technologies that might not have looked at otherwise. "One thing that we've done that is incredibly popular is to offer hosted Blackberries service," said Lovell.

One of the biggest difficulties faced by any hosting company is ensuring that customer support is first-rate. Thinkgrid hopes that it has cracked that particular problem. "We've created a network of support 'pods' of five people who are assigned to particular accounts. It means that they know the customers by name. The last thing we wanted to do was get the reputation as a company that would put you through 6 rounds of IVR before the query gets answered."

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Ashley Pashler said on Tuesday, 18 November 2008

i think this is an interesting idea. but can they get the support right?

Crosspond said on Friday, 21 November 2008

These days you can virtualize most functions that offices take for granted. I run my business from home, and the virtual technology I rely on most would be my phone system—Gotvmail. Support is spot-on, and it gives us the professional image of being a cohesive office.

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