SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> Enterprise Infrastructure >> Systems Management

Dollars to Dunkin' Donuts – Remote network franchises really deliver

Dollars to Dunkin' Donuts – Remote network franchises really deliver

By:  Burt Latamore  On: 29 May 2007 For: Computerworld (US online) Creator

What network monitoring model can save you gobs of cash and is currently being used by Dunkin' Donuts. Answer: the managed services provider model that blends advanced network monitoring with a franchising system.

COMMENT ON THIS ARTICLE

Highly distributed organizations run their IT systems on a managed services provider (MSP) model -- supporting numbers of offices dispersed over a geographic area.

Mark Scott, president of The Utility Company, says the best model for this combines advanced network monitoring with a franchising system, such as that used by Dunkin' Donuts.

His company is an MSP serving a growing population of small companies -- "five-person PR firms, 30-person law offices" -- across North America from its Ottawa, Canada, base.

"We try to anticipate problems. We fix about 90 percent of them proactively, and as much as possible remotely, over the network. But when we diagnose a hardware problem, we send out the franchisee for that area."

The franchisees are either small, independent IT professional support companies or affiliates such as office equipment dealers and telecommunications resellers, often focused on specific vertical markets.

"We have carved the continent up into 2,000 exclusive markets, so if I were pitching you a franchise I could describe the territory street by street," Scott says.

"(Our Connected Office service) lets technology professionals who want to go out on their own offer their clients a complete service, hardware and software."

Based on this model, The Utility Company provides a fixed-fee total support service, including help desk, antivirus, patch management and remediation, to offices of fewer than about 100 desks at about US$80 per seat per month under its "Connected Office" umbrella.

This may sound expensive, but Scott argues that it can save clients money by eliminating the huge waste of IT investment that typifies many office environments.

Force-fed the latest and greatest

"The whole IT value chain is designed to force-feed you to buy equipment. Vista or some other 'latest and greatest' technology comes out, and you start hearing about how you have to upgrade. Then you need new hardware to run the technology, or vice versa, you need to buy the new software to get the most from your new hardware."

The result, he says, is that organizations constantly buy technology they don't need.

"We have a Utility Meter Reading process that takes a snapshot of what you spend per user per month on technology. We find the average company spends $360, 50 percent more than it spends on rent and occupancy. Then they use 15 percent of it."

That is partly the result of overbuying and partly the result of underuse. For instance, if users are not trained in how to get the most from complex technologies such as Office, they are unlikely to get full value from their employer's investment.

"The big hardware vendors constantly publish reports showing that the gear they sell is used in the low teens (percentage of utilization capacity)," he says. As part of Connected Office, The Utility Company helps its users match technology investments to their actual business needs.


Sign up for our Newsletters












Print |  Views: 755   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




Burt Latamore Burt Latamore 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.

Related Content

Keeping a lid on spiralling network costs
Keeping a lid on spiralling network costsIt doesn't make sense to invest in more network technology if you haven't squeezed all the value out of your existing network investment
Verizon helps customers get a knack for NAC
Verizon helps customers get a knack for NACNAC's complexity has lead to both delays and difficulties in rolling out the technology across entire corporate networks, as well as in implementing it to its fullest capabilities
IDC picks 10 best Canadian firms to watch for
IDC picks 10 best Canadian firms to watch forSoftware companies share best practices, strategies and offer some tips on how to stay on top of your game
Dan Swanson's Security Resources: #16
this week’s resources are a diverse collection of web sites and articles i’ve come across over the past couple of years.  
blog comments powered by Disqus