ML
    • Recent
    • Categories
    • Tags
    • Popular
    • Users
    • Groups
    • Register
    • Login

    Testing Zulip

    IT Discussion
    zulip instant messaging
    9
    113
    9.7k
    Loading More Posts
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
    Reply
    • Reply as topic
    Log in to reply
    This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
    • stacksofplatesS
      stacksofplates @stacksofplates
      last edited by

      @stacksofplates said in Testing Zulip:

      @gjacobse said in Testing Zulip:

      @stacksofplates said in Testing Zulip:

      @scottalanmiller said in Testing Zulip:

      At that price, we were able to afford to hire a full time engineer just to build and support a solution to replace it and were able to provide a vastly superior solution to the customers, at lower cost

      You hired an engineer for $600 a month?

      I'm guessing because "hundreds" doesn't tell me anything. So I'm going with 200 people.

      While it’s been two or so years since I was an active NTG staffer, one client would have had 200 employees in just one state, and they where in all 50.

      Rocket was a good process as it allowed for whole company separation and still include notifications like down time. But also allowed for the personalization of direct contact that wasn’t a flood to NTG

      Wait a minute. So NTG is offering Rocket.Chat as a service to customers for internal communication along with using it as a means of notifications for SLOs?

      And at no cost to the customer?

      jmooreJ scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • gjacobseG
        gjacobse @stacksofplates
        last edited by

        @stacksofplates said in Testing Zulip:

        @gjacobse said in Testing Zulip:

        @stacksofplates said in Testing Zulip:

        @scottalanmiller said in Testing Zulip:

        At that price, we were able to afford to hire a full time engineer just to build and support a solution to replace it and were able to provide a vastly superior solution to the customers, at lower cost

        You hired an engineer for $600 a month?

        I'm guessing because "hundreds" doesn't tell me anything. So I'm going with 200 people.

        While it’s been two or so years since I was an active NTG staffer, one client would have had 200 employees in just one state, and they where in all 50.

        Rocket was a good process as it allowed for whole company separation and still include notifications like down time. But also allowed for the personalization of direct contact that wasn’t a flood to NTG

        Wait a minute. So NTG is offering Rocket.Chat as a service to customers for internal communication along with using it as a means of notifications for SLOs?

        Client to NTG Only - IIRC

        stacksofplatesS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • jmooreJ
          jmoore @stacksofplates
          last edited by

          @stacksofplates said in Testing Zulip:

          @stacksofplates said in Testing Zulip:

          @gjacobse said in Testing Zulip:

          @stacksofplates said in Testing Zulip:

          @scottalanmiller said in Testing Zulip:

          At that price, we were able to afford to hire a full time engineer just to build and support a solution to replace it and were able to provide a vastly superior solution to the customers, at lower cost

          You hired an engineer for $600 a month?

          I'm guessing because "hundreds" doesn't tell me anything. So I'm going with 200 people.

          While it’s been two or so years since I was an active NTG staffer, one client would have had 200 employees in just one state, and they where in all 50.

          Rocket was a good process as it allowed for whole company separation and still include notifications like down time. But also allowed for the personalization of direct contact that wasn’t a flood to NTG

          Wait a minute. So NTG is offering Rocket.Chat as a service to customers for internal communication along with using it as a means of notifications for SLOs?

          And at no cost to the customer?

          Yeah I'm not understanding this line of reasoning either. I get they want to be cheap to get business, but at some point it's not going to work as well as clients need as they often need hand-holding.

          DashrenderD scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • DashrenderD
            Dashrender @scottalanmiller
            last edited by

            @scottalanmiller said in Testing Zulip:

            @stacksofplates said in Testing Zulip:

            For fun, let's say Scott as the CIO of NTG makes a base salary of $100,000. Pretty low, but an even number to work with. That's $80 per hour the company is paying to employ him. Let's also say it takes two days of work to set up a new solution. Actual setup, testing, etc. Over however long it's probably 16 hours of work, even if it's more than that in days. We'll be generous and say NTG has 40 employees.

            Just to make it clear how impactful this is. We had a product in use by a portion of our customer base. It was only $3. Which yes, is 50% more than we are talking about here, but the same logic.

            At that price, we were able to afford to hire a full time engineer just to build and support a solution to replace it and were able to provide a vastly superior solution to the customers, at lower cost. The entire engineering budget for it was covered in the elimination of the $3/mo/end point cost. All of it. With lots of profit overhead. Lots.

            Now that's having a full time engineer for something complex. Imagine how little engineering time is needed for something like Rocket, Mattermost, etc. That $2/mo is a cripplying expense that we'd be insane to even entertain. Even at $.50/user we can do it way cheaper in house. More like $.005/user.

            how is the same thing not said about hosted email?

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • DashrenderD
              Dashrender @jmoore
              last edited by

              @jmoore said in Testing Zulip:

              @stacksofplates said in Testing Zulip:

              @stacksofplates said in Testing Zulip:

              @gjacobse said in Testing Zulip:

              @stacksofplates said in Testing Zulip:

              @scottalanmiller said in Testing Zulip:

              At that price, we were able to afford to hire a full time engineer just to build and support a solution to replace it and were able to provide a vastly superior solution to the customers, at lower cost

              You hired an engineer for $600 a month?

              I'm guessing because "hundreds" doesn't tell me anything. So I'm going with 200 people.

              While it’s been two or so years since I was an active NTG staffer, one client would have had 200 employees in just one state, and they where in all 50.

              Rocket was a good process as it allowed for whole company separation and still include notifications like down time. But also allowed for the personalization of direct contact that wasn’t a flood to NTG

              Wait a minute. So NTG is offering Rocket.Chat as a service to customers for internal communication along with using it as a means of notifications for SLOs?

              And at no cost to the customer?

              Yeah I'm not understanding this line of reasoning either. I get they want to be cheap to get business, but at some point it's not going to work as well as clients need as they often need hand-holding.

              I'm sure it's not at no cost - but it's at like 5 cents/user/m or even less - it's most likely just baked into their monthly per user/device support fee.

              I'm with the others pushing back on Scott though - are you saying any MSP worth it's salt is going to these lengths that NTG is to give awesome benefits at nearly no cost? Doesn't seem like making money is a goal here at all. Heck, even staying operating seems challenging at times. But really that would depend on your profits on the existing fees, perhaps you're already making 100% met margins, so this expense of labor would be worthwhile.

              stacksofplatesS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • stacksofplatesS
                stacksofplates @gjacobse
                last edited by

                @gjacobse said in Testing Zulip:

                @stacksofplates said in Testing Zulip:

                @gjacobse said in Testing Zulip:

                @stacksofplates said in Testing Zulip:

                @scottalanmiller said in Testing Zulip:

                At that price, we were able to afford to hire a full time engineer just to build and support a solution to replace it and were able to provide a vastly superior solution to the customers, at lower cost

                You hired an engineer for $600 a month?

                I'm guessing because "hundreds" doesn't tell me anything. So I'm going with 200 people.

                While it’s been two or so years since I was an active NTG staffer, one client would have had 200 employees in just one state, and they where in all 50.

                Rocket was a good process as it allowed for whole company separation and still include notifications like down time. But also allowed for the personalization of direct contact that wasn’t a flood to NTG

                Wait a minute. So NTG is offering Rocket.Chat as a service to customers for internal communication along with using it as a means of notifications for SLOs?

                Client to NTG Only - IIRC

                How does that work? You'd have to do private groups or something if you're using a singular instance. Unless there's multiple Rocket.Chat servers running, one for each client?

                How would you keep people at company A from talking to people at company B?

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • stacksofplatesS
                  stacksofplates @Dashrender
                  last edited by

                  @Dashrender said in Testing Zulip:

                  @jmoore said in Testing Zulip:

                  @stacksofplates said in Testing Zulip:

                  @stacksofplates said in Testing Zulip:

                  @gjacobse said in Testing Zulip:

                  @stacksofplates said in Testing Zulip:

                  @scottalanmiller said in Testing Zulip:

                  At that price, we were able to afford to hire a full time engineer just to build and support a solution to replace it and were able to provide a vastly superior solution to the customers, at lower cost

                  You hired an engineer for $600 a month?

                  I'm guessing because "hundreds" doesn't tell me anything. So I'm going with 200 people.

                  While it’s been two or so years since I was an active NTG staffer, one client would have had 200 employees in just one state, and they where in all 50.

                  Rocket was a good process as it allowed for whole company separation and still include notifications like down time. But also allowed for the personalization of direct contact that wasn’t a flood to NTG

                  Wait a minute. So NTG is offering Rocket.Chat as a service to customers for internal communication along with using it as a means of notifications for SLOs?

                  And at no cost to the customer?

                  Yeah I'm not understanding this line of reasoning either. I get they want to be cheap to get business, but at some point it's not going to work as well as clients need as they often need hand-holding.

                  I'm sure it's not at no cost - but it's at like 5 cents/user/m or even less - it's most likely just baked into their monthly per user/device support fee.

                  I'm with the others pushing back on Scott though - are you saying any MSP worth it's salt is going to these lengths that NTG is to give awesome benefits at nearly no cost? Doesn't seem like making money is a goal here at all. Heck, even staying operating seems challenging at times. But really that would depend on your profits on the existing fees, perhaps you're already making 100% met margins, so this expense of labor would be worthwhile.

                  Yeah not even the free part. How do you track any of this? Tickets come in on a system built for internal chat (and external through public channels obv). How do you keep track of any of that? Unless you set webhooks or something to create tickets in a ticketing system, which at that point, just have them submit tickets? I don't understand this workflow at all.

                  DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • scottalanmillerS
                    scottalanmiller @VoIP_n00b
                    last edited by

                    @VoIP_n00b said in Testing Zulip:

                    @scottalanmiller what's your time worth?

                    MY time? What does MY time have to do with it?

                    I think you intend to as how much the time of my staff is worth. And we've already established that I can save a lot by hiring someone to run this system rather than paying $2/mo.

                    I covered that, so there should be no question that the savings from building, rather than buying, is huge no matter how it is worded.

                    DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • DashrenderD
                      Dashrender @stacksofplates
                      last edited by

                      @stacksofplates said in Testing Zulip:

                      @Dashrender said in Testing Zulip:

                      @jmoore said in Testing Zulip:

                      @stacksofplates said in Testing Zulip:

                      @stacksofplates said in Testing Zulip:

                      @gjacobse said in Testing Zulip:

                      @stacksofplates said in Testing Zulip:

                      @scottalanmiller said in Testing Zulip:

                      At that price, we were able to afford to hire a full time engineer just to build and support a solution to replace it and were able to provide a vastly superior solution to the customers, at lower cost

                      You hired an engineer for $600 a month?

                      I'm guessing because "hundreds" doesn't tell me anything. So I'm going with 200 people.

                      While it’s been two or so years since I was an active NTG staffer, one client would have had 200 employees in just one state, and they where in all 50.

                      Rocket was a good process as it allowed for whole company separation and still include notifications like down time. But also allowed for the personalization of direct contact that wasn’t a flood to NTG

                      Wait a minute. So NTG is offering Rocket.Chat as a service to customers for internal communication along with using it as a means of notifications for SLOs?

                      And at no cost to the customer?

                      Yeah I'm not understanding this line of reasoning either. I get they want to be cheap to get business, but at some point it's not going to work as well as clients need as they often need hand-holding.

                      I'm sure it's not at no cost - but it's at like 5 cents/user/m or even less - it's most likely just baked into their monthly per user/device support fee.

                      I'm with the others pushing back on Scott though - are you saying any MSP worth it's salt is going to these lengths that NTG is to give awesome benefits at nearly no cost? Doesn't seem like making money is a goal here at all. Heck, even staying operating seems challenging at times. But really that would depend on your profits on the existing fees, perhaps you're already making 100% met margins, so this expense of labor would be worthwhile.

                      Yeah not even the free part. How do you track any of this? Tickets come in on a system built for internal chat (and external through public channels obv). How do you keep track of any of that? Unless you set webhooks or something to create tickets in a ticketing system, which at that point, just have them submit tickets? I don't understand this workflow at all.

                      I can't speak to any of that.

                      Scott is so gun-ho for Email is the ruler of them all - I would suspect that only email generates tickets, and Rocket.chat is only for chatting.

                      scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • scottalanmillerS
                        scottalanmiller @stacksofplates
                        last edited by

                        @stacksofplates said in Testing Zulip:

                        @scottalanmiller said in Testing Zulip:

                        @stacksofplates said in Testing Zulip:

                        @gjacobse said in Testing Zulip:

                        @stacksofplates said in Testing Zulip:

                        @scottalanmiller said in Testing Zulip:

                        @stacksofplates said in Testing Zulip:

                        @scottalanmiller said in Testing Zulip:

                        Rocket is no longer going to do notifications for free,

                        It shows you get 5 thousand for free per month?

                        Yeah, doesn't seem like nearly enough for us. We've hundreds of users and constant chatter. Seems like we could go through that in a few days.

                        How many users do you have? Seems like a good investment to pay the $3 a month to support Rocket.Chat.

                        Edit: Or go SaaS with them and pay $2 a month and have no limit for notifications at all (and not have to manage anything). That seems like a crazy deal.

                        Edit2: Sorry missed the hundreds. You have hundreds of employees?

                        Hundreds of NTG employees? No -

                        But NTG client employees number in the hundreds - and they use it as a point of contact other than phone or mail

                        Then it's a no brainer. The $2 should be built into the support cost. The employee cost for it should be minimal.

                        That's not viable MSP math. You start doing that and suddenly every tool costs you tens of thousands of dollars and you spend so much supporting a person that no one can afford you.

                        There is a reason why $3/mo RMM tools don't make sense, it's too costly on an end point / person basis. Individual endpoints or people should be cheap. If the ENTIRE cost was $2 well heck, yeah. But once you start down this path you pay $2 here, $2 there and suddenly you're spending more per user on tooling than most companies charge for support.

                        The idea that you just bill the customer for you not keeping the cost down sounds great, but in reality, being the company that delivers more value for less money goes a long way.

                        Wait so instead of a support portal you create a user for anyone from the customer who wants to talk to you guys?

                        Yes, because we are a full IT department and we provide it as intracompany communications. We could use a support portal, and Rocket makes that as an option, but we need two way communications, not one way, so a more traditional IM platform tends to work much better.

                        We have customers that require us to use their own Slack, Teams, etc. but this is for all the customers that don't have one of their own to put us on.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • scottalanmillerS
                          scottalanmiller @stacksofplates
                          last edited by

                          @stacksofplates said in Testing Zulip:

                          @scottalanmiller said in Testing Zulip:

                          At that price, we were able to afford to hire a full time engineer just to build and support a solution to replace it and were able to provide a vastly superior solution to the customers, at lower cost

                          You hired an engineer for $600 a month?

                          I'm guessing because "hundreds" doesn't tell me anything. So I'm going with 200 people.

                          Closer to a thousand, but yeah, in that ballpark.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • scottalanmillerS
                            scottalanmiller @stacksofplates
                            last edited by

                            @stacksofplates said in Testing Zulip:

                            @stacksofplates said in Testing Zulip:

                            @gjacobse said in Testing Zulip:

                            @stacksofplates said in Testing Zulip:

                            @scottalanmiller said in Testing Zulip:

                            At that price, we were able to afford to hire a full time engineer just to build and support a solution to replace it and were able to provide a vastly superior solution to the customers, at lower cost

                            You hired an engineer for $600 a month?

                            I'm guessing because "hundreds" doesn't tell me anything. So I'm going with 200 people.

                            While it’s been two or so years since I was an active NTG staffer, one client would have had 200 employees in just one state, and they where in all 50.

                            Rocket was a good process as it allowed for whole company separation and still include notifications like down time. But also allowed for the personalization of direct contact that wasn’t a flood to NTG

                            Wait a minute. So NTG is offering Rocket.Chat as a service to customers for internal communication along with using it as a means of notifications for SLOs?

                            And at no cost to the customer?

                            Customer pays us for IT services. If we spread the cost out amongst all customers, the cost to each customer is nominal. If we make it a hard $2/user it becomes an awkward line item and endless questions as to why we don't just use a free service.

                            This is way more cost effective for us than answering account questions and/or using a bunch of disconnected services.

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • DashrenderD
                              Dashrender @scottalanmiller
                              last edited by

                              @scottalanmiller said in Testing Zulip:

                              @VoIP_n00b said in Testing Zulip:

                              @scottalanmiller what's your time worth?

                              MY time? What does MY time have to do with it?

                              I think you intend to as how much the time of my staff is worth. And we've already established that I can save a lot by hiring someone to run this system rather than paying $2/mo.

                              I covered that, so there should be no question that the savings from building, rather than buying, is huge no matter how it is worded.

                              Let's assume you have 100,000 supported end users, your engineer costs you $120k/y, yeah, $2*200,000 = $400,000, you definitely have a savings.

                              But as @stacksofplates has said - are you not passing along the cost of that engineer to the customer? Let's assume you are, $120,000/200,000 = $0.60/year = 5 cents a month. So we assume you're tacking in 5+ cents a month per end user to the support contracts to cover his costs? and this is before the server/power/hosting/whatever expenses (granted those are likely WAY lower).

                              scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • scottalanmillerS
                                scottalanmiller @jmoore
                                last edited by

                                @jmoore said in Testing Zulip:

                                @stacksofplates said in Testing Zulip:

                                @stacksofplates said in Testing Zulip:

                                @gjacobse said in Testing Zulip:

                                @stacksofplates said in Testing Zulip:

                                @scottalanmiller said in Testing Zulip:

                                At that price, we were able to afford to hire a full time engineer just to build and support a solution to replace it and were able to provide a vastly superior solution to the customers, at lower cost

                                You hired an engineer for $600 a month?

                                I'm guessing because "hundreds" doesn't tell me anything. So I'm going with 200 people.

                                While it’s been two or so years since I was an active NTG staffer, one client would have had 200 employees in just one state, and they where in all 50.

                                Rocket was a good process as it allowed for whole company separation and still include notifications like down time. But also allowed for the personalization of direct contact that wasn’t a flood to NTG

                                Wait a minute. So NTG is offering Rocket.Chat as a service to customers for internal communication along with using it as a means of notifications for SLOs?

                                And at no cost to the customer?

                                Yeah I'm not understanding this line of reasoning either. I get they want to be cheap to get business, but at some point it's not going to work as well as clients need as they often need hand-holding.

                                It's less a desire to be cheap, and more a desire to provide a premium service. Would you want your IT company to not be easy to communicate with bidirectionally? Very few companies want an IT department that is set apart and not an active participant in the business.

                                jmooreJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • scottalanmillerS
                                  scottalanmiller @Dashrender
                                  last edited by

                                  @Dashrender said in Testing Zulip:

                                  Scott is so gun-ho for Email is the ruler of them all - I would suspect that only email generates tickets, and Rocket.chat is only for chatting.

                                  No, I'm "pro appropriate tools", you just perceive that as email being the only thing I like because email is more often appropriate than most people think.

                                  We are a premium service with high end customer service. We work far more by phone and IM, than by email, because it's what our customers pay us to do.

                                  You are mixing "how I'd want my own business run" with "how we provide customer service to others." They are different things. I don't want a burger cooked well done, I want it rare. But good customer service lets the customer decide how to cook their burger, even if we think that it is gross that way.

                                  DashrenderD stacksofplatesS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • scottalanmillerS
                                    scottalanmiller @Dashrender
                                    last edited by

                                    @Dashrender said in Testing Zulip:

                                    @scottalanmiller said in Testing Zulip:

                                    @VoIP_n00b said in Testing Zulip:

                                    @scottalanmiller what's your time worth?

                                    MY time? What does MY time have to do with it?

                                    I think you intend to as how much the time of my staff is worth. And we've already established that I can save a lot by hiring someone to run this system rather than paying $2/mo.

                                    I covered that, so there should be no question that the savings from building, rather than buying, is huge no matter how it is worded.

                                    Let's assume you have 100,000 supported end users, your engineer costs you $120k/y, yeah, $2*200,000 = $400,000, you definitely have a savings.

                                    But as @stacksofplates has said - are you not passing along the cost of that engineer to the customer? Let's assume you are, $120,000/200,000 = $0.60/year = 5 cents a month. So we assume you're tacking in 5+ cents a month per end user to the support contracts to cover his costs? and this is before the server/power/hosting/whatever expenses (granted those are likely WAY lower).

                                    So are we tacking it on as a specific line item? No. Are we including all that cost in their contracts, yes. It's just part of the background infrastructure in the same way that every MSP automatically includes the cost of phone minutes or email hosting or whatever.

                                    In the end, customers always pay for all services, always. The only exception is a company that has no income. Everything we do, one way or another, is paid for by the customers as that is the only source of money. This is true of all businesses. The only question is whether or not we expose the cost structure to the client, and the answer is no because that would be confusing, costly, and unnecessarily complex when we are able to keep the cost so low that it is background noise.

                                    If we were charging several dollars per person, then customers would start demanding to control the line item like reducing who gets to communicate and undermine our ability to do a good job. By keeping it "background noise" cheap and just part of the infrastructure, it's so cheap that there is no discussion, just like there isn't for email or phone minutes.

                                    DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • DashrenderD
                                      Dashrender @scottalanmiller
                                      last edited by

                                      @scottalanmiller said in Testing Zulip:

                                      @Dashrender said in Testing Zulip:

                                      Scott is so gun-ho for Email is the ruler of them all - I would suspect that only email generates tickets, and Rocket.chat is only for chatting.

                                      No, I'm "pro appropriate tools", you just perceive that as email being the only thing I like because email is more often appropriate than most people think.

                                      We are a premium service with high end customer service. We work far more by phone and IM, than by email, because it's what our customers pay us to do.

                                      You are mixing "how I'd want my own business run" with "how we provide customer service to others." They are different things. I don't want a burger cooked well done, I want it rare. But good customer service lets the customer decide how to cook their burger, even if we think that it is gross that way.

                                      Don't over read into what I said - I just said gun-ho, nothing more, nothing less... now perhaps that we a bit inaccurate because, as you said, Pro appropriate tool - would likely have been a better thing for yo to be gun-ho over 😉

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • stacksofplatesS
                                        stacksofplates @scottalanmiller
                                        last edited by

                                        @scottalanmiller said in Testing Zulip:

                                        @Dashrender said in Testing Zulip:

                                        Scott is so gun-ho for Email is the ruler of them all - I would suspect that only email generates tickets, and Rocket.chat is only for chatting.

                                        No, I'm "pro appropriate tools", you just perceive that as email being the only thing I like because email is more often appropriate than most people think.

                                        We are a premium service with high end customer service. We work far more by phone and IM, than by email, because it's what our customers pay us to do.

                                        You are mixing "how I'd want my own business run" with "how we provide customer service to others." They are different things. I don't want a burger cooked well done, I want it rare. But good customer service lets the customer decide how to cook their burger, even if we think that it is gross that way.

                                        How do you track any of that? Unless people now have to enter things in multiple systems?

                                        scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • DashrenderD
                                          Dashrender @scottalanmiller
                                          last edited by

                                          @scottalanmiller said in Testing Zulip:

                                          @Dashrender said in Testing Zulip:

                                          @scottalanmiller said in Testing Zulip:

                                          @VoIP_n00b said in Testing Zulip:

                                          @scottalanmiller what's your time worth?

                                          MY time? What does MY time have to do with it?

                                          I think you intend to as how much the time of my staff is worth. And we've already established that I can save a lot by hiring someone to run this system rather than paying $2/mo.

                                          I covered that, so there should be no question that the savings from building, rather than buying, is huge no matter how it is worded.

                                          Let's assume you have 100,000 supported end users, your engineer costs you $120k/y, yeah, $2*200,000 = $400,000, you definitely have a savings.

                                          But as @stacksofplates has said - are you not passing along the cost of that engineer to the customer? Let's assume you are, $120,000/200,000 = $0.60/year = 5 cents a month. So we assume you're tacking in 5+ cents a month per end user to the support contracts to cover his costs? and this is before the server/power/hosting/whatever expenses (granted those are likely WAY lower).

                                          So are we tacking it on as a specific line item? No. Are we including all that cost in their contracts, yes. It's just part of the background infrastructure in the same way that every MSP automatically includes the cost of phone minutes or email hosting or whatever.

                                          In the end, customers always pay for all services, always. The only exception is a company that has no income. Everything we do, one way or another, is paid for by the customers as that is the only source of money. This is true of all businesses. The only question is whether or not we expose the cost structure to the client, and the answer is no because that would be confusing, costly, and unnecessarily complex when we are able to keep the cost so low that it is background noise.

                                          If we were charging several dollars per person, then customers would start demanding to control the line item like reducing who gets to communicate and undermine our ability to do a good job. By keeping it "background noise" cheap and just part of the infrastructure, it's so cheap that there is no discussion, just like there isn't for email or phone minutes.

                                          no, it never needs to be a line item... it's just inside the pricing you provide, but your pricing includes these expenses. If you raised your rate by $2/user/month, you're saying that you'd price yourself out of business?
                                          I guess as long as there are good usable free tools, then you're right, you should go that route, as long as those free tools cost you less than $2/user/month, or at least whatever portion of your monthly fee is allocated to this benefit you're giving your customers.

                                          As an aside - Cox has recently decided that providing "free" email services to their ISP customers is no longer viable. They have dumped email for all new customers. I'm assuming at some point they will dump it for grandfathered users as well.

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • scottalanmillerS
                                            scottalanmiller
                                            last edited by

                                            I'll give another example that I think shows a similar case that "feels" different. We use MeshCentral for remote access/support. We don't charge for it as a line item for our existing customers (or new ones, lol.) The cost of it is crazy low on a per machine basis. Just having one conversation with a customer about where they want to pay for it and where they don't would waste an unacceptable amount of money for no gain. It's heavily to both our benefit and our customers' to have it in place. Everyone wins by making it universal and keeping the cost so low that no one notices.

                                            If we broke it out, the cost of managing the accounts, tracking where it is deployed, discussing with the clients would easily cost $1/machine or more. By not doing that and simply deploying all/none on a client by client basis keeps the cost to a few pennies. It's deployed by script, it's managed in a blanket way that makes cost really, really low. So instead of a dollar per machine, it's more like a dollar per customer. Background noise. Everyone benefits.

                                            DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                            • 1
                                            • 2
                                            • 3
                                            • 4
                                            • 5
                                            • 6
                                            • 2 / 6
                                            • First post
                                              Last post