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Cloud is Game Changer for Ailing SMEs

by david.nunes

Cloud is Game-Changer for Ailing SMEs

 

Cloud technology is levelling the playing field for small businesses, allowing them to compete with larger companies despite the grim economic climate.

 

With little capital outlay in setting-up and elastic scalability, the cloud is enabling SMEs to have the infrastructure to compete for large contracts without expensive upfront costs – making it a valuable lifeline in a recession.

 

Harvey Davies, owner and director of iStorCloud believes that although the public sector may be tightening its belt, meaning that there are fewer contracts available; with cloud infrastructure SMEs can increase their chances of winning the crucial business that is available.

 

He said: “When we look at a client of ours within the private health sector, moving to the cloud was the defining moment of their year.  It gave them the capabilities to bid alongside much bigger companies for huge NHS contracts that would have otherwise come with equally large IT costs.”

 

Adam Swanson, business manager at Transalis, explained that not only does the cloud level the playing field for SMEs, it also provides companies with benefits that an in-house infrastructure could not.

 

He said: “A lot of work that we do is to reassure businesses that they do not need to have all of their IT resource in-house. Moving to the cloud and onto a piece of our infrastructure means that they do not have to manage, monitor or even worry about their IT. It also equips them with capabilities far beyond the servers that they had on site that had a higher investment outlay.”

 

Paul Harris, marketing director at hosting specialist UKFast said: “In times like these, anything that allows bosses to focus on the ‘nuts and bolts’ of a business, safe in the knowledge that the IT function is running smoothly in the background is crucial, especially when that technology has the potential to cut costs and increase competitiveness.”

 

“We have most of our infrastructure within the cloud,” said Andy Still, technical director at Intechnica. “We choose to do this so that we don’t have to worry about managing it in-house and can concentrate on growth in other areas. It allows us to be very agile as a fast-growing business.”

 

The debate on the application of cloud technology was held at City Tower in Manchester and hosted by UKFast.

 

About UKFast

 

UKFast is one of Europe’s fastest-growing technical companies as ranked by Deloitte and the Sunday Times Tech Track. In the last year CEO Lawrence Jones has been named North West Entrepreneur of the Year, while his team has collected the Greater Manchester Award for Innovation. In addition to being listed as one of The Sunday Times best companies to work for, UKFast also won the UK IT Awards Employer of the Year in 2010.

 

Previous accolades include being named the ISPA UK’s Best Hosting Provider four years consecutively. UKFast has over 400,000 web domains on its network and over 4,000 clients across all industries. Clients include Virgin, Microsoft and UKTV. UKFast is a member of the Cloud Industry Forum.

 

About the Round Tables

The UKFast round tables bring experts together to look at how the internet has changed the way we do business. The themes are focused on vertical industries or topical themes, with subjects ranging from tweeting businesses to PCI compliance, and sustainable online society to e-commerce and the mobile web.

 

To date, big brands including the BBC, Travel Supermarket and Learn Direct have brought their knowledge to the table, alongside some of the UK’s fastest-growing companies including Envirofone, Historic Futures and Printerland.

 

To get involved as a panellist in future discussions contact kate.welch@ukfast.co.uk or jonathan.bowers@ukfast.co.uk.

 

 

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