Tradies move to the cloud
Forget the stereotypical image of a plumber or electrician you have in mind – these days tradies are getting technical.
Forget the stereotypical image of a plumber or electrician you have in mind – these days tradies are getting technical.
Two years ago, cloud accounting was still very new to many accountants and most didn’t even know that it existed.
Cloud computing may be the hottest thing in data storage right now, but new research reveals some companies are setting themselves up to fail.
Cloud providers can offer more flexible services at a cheaper price than most enterprises can achieve by amortising their equipment and maintenance costs over a large number of customers.
Today’s customers expect to engage with brands on their terms: they want to call their bank, write on their mobile service provider’s Facebook wall and SMS their insurance company when it suits them.
New study reveals SMBs are losing over $24 billion in productivity every year, due to non-technical employees having to manage a company’s IT solutions.
Adaptive Planning, global cloud-based business analytics solutions provider, recently announced the introduction of Adaptive Consolidation, a new integrated cloud-based solution for comprehensive close-and-disclose financial consolidations and analysis.
One strategy doesn’t fit all. Here are seven areas in which cloud computing can benefit both your customers and your profits.
This is the decade of The Cloud. Cloud is the most transformational force shaping business today. It breaks down geographic barriers and allows every small business to address a much larger market and become a multinational.
Data sovereignty pertains to data storing, sending and processing restrictions outside national borders. Legally termed as “trans-border data flow” data sovereignty still remains to be one of the top concerns of SMBs hindering them to move their business to the cloud.