Move your business into the cloud, it’s time
Say the term ‘work from home’ to some employers, and it’s greeted by a variety of snorts, jeers and ‘get real’.
Say the term ‘work from home’ to some employers, and it’s greeted by a variety of snorts, jeers and ‘get real’.
The Australian cloud computing market is expected to explode over the next few years, according to findings from Frost & Sullivan’s latest report, State of Cloud Computing in Australia Report 2014.
No one ever said that starting a successful business from scratch was going to be easy. Not only do you need to build a killer product and quickly grow your customer base, but you also need to hire a rock star staff and put the right infrastructure in place to help you grow.
Tradies may have been slow to adapt to the digital revolution, but a new breed are breaking the mold, engaging with social media and utilising cloud services as they compete to market themselves online.
Internet giant Google has purchased New York based startup Divide, a cloud-based mobile device management platform that has been touted to solve BYOD dilemmas for android users.
Cloud computing has already changed the world around us, and technology is totally uninhibited by geography. But with all this innovation in our personal lives, how is it affecting us in business? Is it sustainable?
When it comes to running a small business, there are heaps of tools that allow you to manage, streamline and market your company. The best part? You don’t have to pay a thing.
If your business burnt down today, what would happen? Would everything fall to pieces or would you be able to move to a different location, retrieve your files and data and keep going without too much fuss?
Running a business is hard enough without worrying about doing your accounts. So if there was a way to ease your burden, you’d want to know about it, right?
Worksmart meant some big changes, not only from a technology perspective but also from the perspective of how people embraced that change.