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Canadian construction industry builds on SaaS

Canadian construction industry builds on SaaS

By:  Briony Smith  On: 07 Sep 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Most warantee information is still stored in paper binders, but a Vancouver firm is tapping into the software-as-a-service model to change business processes. A Calgary condo builder is among the first users

Fumbling about the junk drawer for that washing machine warrantee is one of the major headaches of being a homeowner, but Vancouver company Conasys has made in-roads in the notoriously tech-averse construction space with its software-as-a-service offering, The Warranty Resource.

The Vancouver-based company spun out of the British Columbia leaky condo crisis, according to executive vice-president Greg Stolz, who started thinking about the connection between software and warranties when putting together binders of warrantee information for builders.

Conasys CEO James Christensen said, “The construction industry is highly fragmented. To catch up to where the manufacturing industry is technologically, they need all that information accounted for in one spot.”

Said Stolz: “Builders and developers are our clients, and, for them, it can be painful to gather up all the warranty information in one place and keep it up to date.”

Instead, the Conasys team would collect the information, which would be placed into its online database of warrantee and product information in PDF form, including model and colour numbers and contact information for inquiries. The software-as-a-service model would allow customers to use a unique log-in to access their customized warrantee page filled with all the warranties for their home components. (They would access this through the builder’s own Web page, to maintain the same look-and-feel.)

“That way,” said Christensen, “if two years later something goes wrong, you have all that information in one place.”

Calgary-based luxury condo builders Statesman Group used to employ a cumbersome proprietary system that often booted users out and didn’t notify administrators when changes had been made. “People just usually ended up e-mailing me directly,” said warranty and customer service manager Tamzin Horan.

“This takes a lot of pressure off us,” according to Horan, who said the software will be implemented with Statesman Group’s Web presence in early 2009. The Warranty Resource records are also refreshingly specific (from grout colours to contact names), and also account for the human habit of losing binders full of warrantee information once the house is built. It is also organized by section, which is an improvement over the higgledy-piggledy nature of many on-site product warranty binders.

“Most builders feel, ‘If I never have to look at another product binder again…’” laughed Canadian Contractor editor—and former contractor—Robert Koci.

Using a software-as-a-service model is a clever way to keep maintenance costs and infrastructure headaches at bay, said Forrester Research principal analyst Chip Gliedman. He said, “The builders can provide this service to their customers much more cheaply, as they don’t have to maintain anything, and it’s not a big technology leap. They’re builders, not Web site builders.”


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Briony Smith Briony Smith is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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