Recent research has highlighted a clear regional split across the UK in the use of online media as a business tool. New Media Knowledge spoke to some regional players from the four corners of the country to get a true reflection.
moreDespite the economic downturn venture capitalists are still looking at investment opportunities in digital media. New Media Knowledge spoke to one to get the low down on what VCs want.
moreWeb publishers and broadcasters always have to look for new and innovative ways to maintain existing audiences and win new ones. When BBC Radio 5 Live realised it was losing listeners to other sources of football-based content it launched a new service to win them back. New Media Knowledge met the people responsible.
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Matthew Haughey of Metafilter talked about the lessons he'd learned about looking after online communities through running the site since it was founded in 1999. The site started as a fairly simple, multi-user weblog where bloggers could trade links. Today, it has developed into a location with 4mn visitors a month, serving 12mn pages. more
The seminar will be structured to provide three formal sessions covering key aspects of the topic followed by a less formal ‘clinic’ session in which attendees can ask about issues that are affecting or might affect their own community and user-generated content sites. We’ve drawn together three experts in online communities to provide the best information available on the topic. more
A panel discussion at the Internet World show this morning concerned the ways digital agencies might embrace or resist the threats and opportunities of a changing marketplace. Ian Delaney reports. more
At FOWD this Wednesday, keynote speaker Brendan Dawes speaker outlined interesting ways forward for creative designers. Ian Delaney was there to report. more
Sundeep Samra of NTT Verio charts the changes taking place in the managed hosting industry, and offers advice for customers on choosing a reliable supplier.
The marketplace for hosting and managed services has changed dramatically in the last year. With high-profile bankruptcies and business line divestitures commonplace, many service providers found the challenging market dynamics too overwhelming. Their fundamental operating assumptions, overly optimistic demand expectations, excessive capital outlays, expansive service offerings and undisciplined operational processes were so flawed that failure was inevitable.
As a result, a shakeout in the hosting services market occurred, allowing only the strongest and the smartest to survive. But the market shakeout left many enterprise customers that were considering hosting and managed services to wonder if the potential benefits of outsourcing are offset by the risks of a service provider’s long-term ability to delivery on its promises.
Choosing the right partner becomes an exercise in risk mitigation for the enterprise. However, vendor assessment proves quite difficult in a competitive landscape that is littered with Chapter 11 filings and uniform marketing messages. Fortunately, some survivors are looking inward to build better business practices that learn from the failures of the past.
Such providers understand that a stable operating model - one dedicated to providing consistent, compelling service at a reasonable price and supported by scalable, efficient operations - is essential to the survival of the hosting proposition. The market’s tendency to throw excess resources - whether they be human beings, CPUs, or bandwidth - at inherent operational problems is no longer sustainable. Instead, these survivors rely on increasing task automation and resource utilization rates to allow operational scale and competitive pricing.
Likewise, today’s service providers rely on standardised solution portfolios (which focus on in-house expertise and enable the consistency of service quality) to replace the 'be-all-things-to-all-customers' approach that diluted service quality with undisciplined one-off projects.
Outsourcing the ongoing operation of an enterprise’s Internet applications has its advantages, such as lower total cost of ownership, access to best-of-breed resources, focus on core competencies and mitigation of growth and technology risks.
But these value propositions are realised only if the service provider business model is run properly. Therefore, enterprises convinced of the benefits of outsourcing must choose their partners wisely. In today’s uncertain hosting service market, potential customers should consider the commitment, operational efficiency, and stability of potential providers:
Commitment
Although the high-flying potential of the hosting market may
have been tempered in recent years, remnants of the headier
times still exist. Several years ago, companies ranging from
hardware and software vendors to IT consultants and telecom
providers raced to grab a slice of the hosting market, but many
lacked the necessary expertise. In today’s market, businesses
need to understand the legacy of a hosting provider, the source
of its hosting knowledge, and its reasons for competing. Hosting
providers that rely on organic expertise from years of
experience are a safer bet than market newcomers that seek a
channel for their own hardware, software, or network
capacity.
Operational Efficiency
Just about any service provider can host a server, but can it
provide hosting services 24×7×365? Can it provide these services
without downtime 99.999% of the time? Can it provide these
services for hundreds or thousands of customers, but make you
feel like you are the only one? Can it provide these services
while bringing costs down for you? For many hosting providers
the answer is no.
However, some smart providers are working to ensure the long-term competitiveness of their offers. Research indicates three growing operational trends - standardization, automation, and modularization - that will drive the transformation of these services:
Customers need to understand if, and how, their provider is improving its operational environment. The answer will ultimately prove evident through the consistency of the provider’s services or the prices at which they are offered.
Stability
As the technology industry fell into turmoil, many buyers of
hosting services opted for a 'flight to quality',
choosing well-known brand names to shelter themselves from
market uncertainty. However, even large global providers were
far from insulated from the market disruption. Customers are
advised to research how stable a potential hosting provider is
likely to be before signing up - by referring to its financial
statements if possible.
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