Search
Recommended Sites
Related Links
Information Products

IMC Course
Protege Bootcamp
IEC
SEO Lab
SecretsToTheirSuccess
Email Marketing eBook
eBay Secrets
Blogging For Dollars

Software Products

Mailloop
eBook Pro
AssocTRAC
Desktop Marketer

Affiliate Program

Affiliate Program




   

Informative Articles

Breaking Business Plans Down to Smaller Steps
Most of us know what a business plan is. We know that it includes product information, marketing strategies, financing, facilities and a customer profile. Yet how many of us know that the comprehensive report is just a piece of paper without...

Insuring Your Small Business
The number of small businesses starting up in the UK increases every year. The people starting a new business do it for a variety of reasons, to follow a dream; the need to stay at home combined with the need to work, redundancy, the...

Small business loans can help you write your success story
Scene one: you are sitting on your office desk surrounded with files and work overload, you are thoroughly frustrated. You work hard and get paid. But somewhere something is lacking. Scene two: you work for yourself; you do what you want to do....

VoIP - ISP's Need To Improve for Small Businesses To take up
I'm a manager in a small UK company whose portfolio also includes looking after the company's computers and telecommunications. On a daily basis I am contacted by telecom firms asking me if they can take 'just 10 minutes of my time to save me 60% on...

Why Web Copy Matters For Small Business
When people think of their business website, they generally only consider the layout. After all, high profile sites generally have headlines and pictures. Go to CNN.com. And then check out ESPN.com. While you're looking, swing by Yahoo,...

 
Is open source software right for your small business?

Is OpenSource software right for your business?

The obvious benefit is the price (It's generally free!) The downside is it can be difficult to install, support and manage . We look at the pros and cons and offer you a few good resources and show you how to evaluate the packages your considering.

Opensource software is software or applications that are developed by people with a real intereset in developing applications for everyone to use for free. The biggest repository of opensource software on the web is www.sourceforge.net.



Keypoints of open source software

1. It's free to use and usually distributed for free. Some companies will package it up and make it a little easier to install, for this they charge a small fee. Other companies will sell the product but then give you free support for a limited time.

2. Most open source software is developed for the linux platform. Before considering adopting linux as an operating system you'll need to make sure you have easy access to linux support people. One really good tech, who happens to be the same guy who sold you the software isn't good enough. He'll end up owning your business.

3. Because the operating systems and programming languages the software is developed in are themselves open source, installation, support and upgrades can be exceedingly difficult.



How to evaluate an open source solution.

Despite what your IT staff or consultant might say you want to evaluate any open source solution you're considering. The depth of the evaluation is dependant on the complexity of the solution. An apache web server would be fairly quick to evaluate. A CRM solution for thirty sales people and several hundred customers is going to require at least a few weeks of testings.

The first step is to set up a test bed server. This can be an older server, just something reliable and fast enough to approximate real world results. As we've mentioned before most open source software is linux based so you're going to need to decide on a linux distribution. Red Hat linux and Suse linux are two of the best and both are supported by the companies that distribute them. Suse linux is now owned by Novell. More than likely you'll need a development environment and a sql server. Make sure the technican loads a distribution package to do this. The best for Apache, MYsql and PHP is Xampp which can be downloaded at apachefriends.org. Don't let your techs tell you they've got a better way by just installing it piece by piece, you'll end up paying for it later.

Have your techicians document the installation process, get the application stable and then step back from the test. If they're spending every day with the end users resolving little problems it should be a red flag that the solution is not stable.

Make sure that the application you're considering has some external support. This may be as simple as a forum of users but they're needs to be a place you can go to for basic support issues. Also make sure the application has a user manual. Many open source packages are released with nothing more than a few sentences describing the installation process.

This next step is extremely important. You need to test for a failure. Have the techs rebuild the system from scratch and restore all of the data. If it's not done within a day, that's another red flag.

After the evaluation ask yourself these questions.

We're most people able to take advantage of the software within a day or two? Was it easy to restore from the simulated crash? Were problems fixed in a timely manner? Did the software stay up and running throughout the test? Did they end users feel like they benefited from using the application?

About the author:

Eric Gurr is the president and CEO of Intralink.

Intralink is a computer consulting and search engine optimization company located in Cincinnati..