Cape Town - In today’s extremely tough economic conditions, many businesses are effectively being excluded from the Cloud revolution because they cannot afford uncapped, unshaped and unthrottled business connectivity solutions.
So says Derek Hershaw, CEO of MWEB ISP, who notes that many businesses, particularly smaller enterprises, often try to make do with consumer-type alternatives.
A "broadband" connection meant for home use is not ideal for use as a business connection. It certainly will not be able to deliver the level of performance that most businesses need – particularly if they hope to use the Internet for more than a few emails and occasional web surfing,” he added.
“They also won’t be able to use technologies like video conferencing, remote back-up and archiving and other essential productivity enhancers that Cloud makes possible, effectively.”
Hershaw pointed out that for technological freedom and cloud exploration, a reliable, fast, uncapped Internet connection is essential.
The connection should be able to cope with high traffic volumes as well as ensure productivity levels within the organisation are not compromised by slow data transfer speeds.
As a business you should ask your ISP for advice to ensure that your connection is the best in terms of value for money and performance. Performance is a function of speed and reliability. Ask your ISP these questions to ensure you get the optimal solution for your business:
* Is the service shaped or unshaped?
* Is priority given to some kinds of traffic over others such as peer-to-peer applications?
* Is there a rolling threshold on the uncapped allowance? If so, what happens when you reach that threshold?
* Does the service have connectivity redundancy on its international links? This is essential if one link goes down.
* Do you provide round-the-clock technical support?
- Fin24
So says Derek Hershaw, CEO of MWEB ISP, who notes that many businesses, particularly smaller enterprises, often try to make do with consumer-type alternatives.
A "broadband" connection meant for home use is not ideal for use as a business connection. It certainly will not be able to deliver the level of performance that most businesses need – particularly if they hope to use the Internet for more than a few emails and occasional web surfing,” he added.
“They also won’t be able to use technologies like video conferencing, remote back-up and archiving and other essential productivity enhancers that Cloud makes possible, effectively.”
Hershaw pointed out that for technological freedom and cloud exploration, a reliable, fast, uncapped Internet connection is essential.
The connection should be able to cope with high traffic volumes as well as ensure productivity levels within the organisation are not compromised by slow data transfer speeds.
As a business you should ask your ISP for advice to ensure that your connection is the best in terms of value for money and performance. Performance is a function of speed and reliability. Ask your ISP these questions to ensure you get the optimal solution for your business:
* Is the service shaped or unshaped?
* Is priority given to some kinds of traffic over others such as peer-to-peer applications?
* Is there a rolling threshold on the uncapped allowance? If so, what happens when you reach that threshold?
* Does the service have connectivity redundancy on its international links? This is essential if one link goes down.
* Do you provide round-the-clock technical support?
- Fin24