Archive for the ‘Small Business’ Category

Tech Tips for Small Biz on About.com

Friday, January 29th, 2010

You may know of About.com, a database/website of helpful articles on almost everything. About.com runs an extensive section for entrepreneurs, which is a great resource for tools, tips and stories about everything involved with entrepreneurship. Included are articles about becoming an entrepreneur, drawing customers, marketing, as well as discussions, and examples of new and upcoming businesses.

In a recent discussion, small businesses contributed to the story “How Entrepreneurs Are Using Technology to Reduce Cost & Increase Profits.” Six company reps, including one from OfficeDrop, contributed to the discussion, resulting in a valuable list of ways web and other technology can be employed to benefit your small business. Below we outline the best tips we found in the discussion along with some quotes from contributors.

  • Gaining customers through Internet and Social Media:
    “E-mail newsletters, blog, Twitter, & Facebook have all allowed us to maximize our exposure and reach new audiences.”
  • Using Google Apps:
    “Google Contacts allows you to share your contact list with fellow employees.”
  • Operating in the cloud:
    “Moving your existing network to a cloud-based model is easy to do, and the cost is usually recovered within the first year.”
  • Using Smartphones:
    “Smartphones allow us to connect with each other and valuable customer data.”

In our contribution, which you can read here, we outline the technology we use to increase productivity and maintain low costs.

One of the technologies we use is our own service, employing a OfficeDrop online account to manage bills and other important documents that need to be organized and easily accessed later. In addition, we use other cloud-based SaaS providers for things like contractor billing, email marketing, and document sharing. See our post about SaaS  marketing tools for small business for more details.

We hope that the About.com’s page for entrepreneurs can be helpful to you, and that your business can benefit from some of the technology discussed.

Top free and low priced sales and marketing SaaS tools for small businesses

Friday, January 8th, 2010

Now that small business SaaS is becoming mainstream, powerful marketing tools can be utilized to build a productive, cost effective marketing strategy for your small business. Five years ago when I worked for a big company we used multi-million dollar tools to track and manage our pipeline. Today, there are plenty of SaaS applications to oil your sales and marketing machine - a lot of them cheap if not free. Here are some of the best SaaS apps we have found for running sales and marketing:

Google Analytics

Google Analytics is the free web analytics tool we use to track site usage to our website. Of course it does the basics like showing us how many visitors we’ve had recently, but it also provides deeper intelligence into the sources of our traffic (from search, links and paid advertising). In addition, it shows us which of our traffic sources, landing pages and blog posts are resulting in actual closed sales and real leads. This is one of the first things I check when I get into the office in the morning.

Zoho CRM

We recently switched from Salesforce to Zoho CRM because Zoho allows for the creation of more online forms at a lower price point. Since we are an online-based business, and have a number of white papers and domains that we run, we need many different ways for potential customers to communicate their needs with us online. Zoho also does the basic blocking and tackling you’d expect in a CRM, allowing note-taking on leads, status updating, report generation, etc. Again, cheap and it’s working well for us. Zoho CRM is free for the first three users.

OfficeDrop

Of course we use our own cloud based service! OfficeDrop helps paper intensive small businesses manage their paper and digital files by scanning and hosting the scanned documents in an online management system. I use OfficeDrop for two major purposes: one, to store + share all of our press, and two, to manage our marketing expenses. Every time I get an invoice or receipt I upload, scan, or email it into the “Marketing” folder in our OfficeDrop account. For example, if I have a bill from Vistaprint for brochures we printed I’ll email it into the 2009/expenses/marketing/December folder. Then, our accountant logs in at the end of the month and can easily see all of our expenses from a single place, making book keeping simple, and making it easier to calculate the ROI from our different marketing campaigns. OfficeDrop is also inexpensive. Pricing for digital plans starts at $4.95/mo and for paper plans starts at $14.95/mo.

Wordpress

We run multiple blogs (blogs are the greatest, easiest way to communicate with our customers), and having a simple blog publishing solution like Wordpress is important. Since there is no limit to the number of writers we can have in the system, our product people and our marketing people can all create and edit each other’s content, and we can set up a simple publishing schedule. Since our main OfficeDrop blog drives about 15% of our sales conversions, it’s well worth the effort. Oh yeah, and the price - in addition to the software being free, the hosted version is also free.

CoTweet

Yes, we are on twitter, and we’ve recently started using CoTweet. It’s an application that allows multiple users to share the same twitter user name (in our case @pixily). Cotweet allows us to see what our last few tweets were easily, so that the marketing team doesn’t send out an overlapping message that the CEO just tweeted from the @pixily account.

Grasshopper

Grasshopper is a VoIP service that we have used to put our sales team in contact with customers. We’ve got our toll- free number on the top of our home page because it’s important for our potential customers to know they can easily contact us. Grasshopper enables us to project that big, solid company feel with dedicated extensions for each salesperson and custom recorded greetings and department forwarding. Above all, it’s a professional and cost effective way to put customers in contact with your sales team. Pricing starts at $9.95/mo.

ProvideSupport

Provide Support is the application we use for customer service, but it is equally utilized for sales and marketing. Provide Support is a great way to install a ‘chat with me’ button. On our website there is a ‘chat with me’ button that puts users in contact with a human being in the case they have any questions about the service prior to signing up. This is a cheap and easy way to engage customers via your website and we highly recommend it. Pricing starts at $15/mo.

ConstantContact

We aspire to the “touchless” sales model, which requires some pretty sophisticated email management. ConstantContact has been great for us, both in terms of functionality and price, although I imagine it would also be great for a company running basic email campaigns. For me, the best part about this service is that I was able to login and within a few minutes started sending emails - it was that easy to use. Pricing starts at $15/mo.

With the advent of low priced SaaS marketing solutions, small businesses can now manage their sales and marketing pipeline just as well as large competitors. The best part of these tools is that you usually don’t have to install or maintain any software or equipment. While large companies have legacy tools, into which they invested hundreds of thousands (or millions) of dollars, small businesses can nimbly shift to the best solution. I’d encourage you to take advantage of the free trials offered by most of the SaaS solutions mentioned above. I think you’ll find that many of them will make you more productive and enhance your customers’ sales experiences.

What SaaS tools do you use to run your business? Let us know by leaving a comment.

Pixily Scans Google QR Code

Wednesday, December 9th, 2009

You may have heard about Google’s new QR code, an innovation from Google that allows users to learn more about a company by scanning a special bar code with their cell phones. If you are a Google Local enabled business you may have received a Google sticker/decal in the mail recently; we at OfficeDrop did (and you can see our scan of it below.)

What is Google’s 2D QR Code?

Here is the Google Maps sticker, with the 2D scannable QR code, that OfficeDrop got in the mail yesterday. Scroll to see it on the lower right of the image:

This 2D QR code is actually a bar code. A camera phone equipped with the right software can scan the QR code, launch a web browser and pull up specific information relating to that particular code! Of course, the new Google Android (or Droid) phones have the ability to read these 2D codes. The scanner is then directed to the company’s Google Map’s ‘Place Page.’ As you can imagine, this creates a lot of incentives for businesses to duplicate and post their unique code for the public to scan. This will allow customers and potential customers to learn more about your company.

Scan Google QR Code

Google hopes you will place the decal you got with the QR code in your businesses window. Then potential customers will use their Droid phones to scan the 2D code and learn more about your business. But you can scan and reprint this decal, and place it in multiple windows or locations! You should not hesitate to scan the sticker into a PDF for later use. With OfficeDrop document scanning service, you can scan your code and save it as a PDF. The code will be printable so that it can be read by cell phones and other QR bar code readers.

  • Scan your QR code

  • Print your code

  • Post and get found!

You can also have your code read off a computer screen once it is in digital storage - another excellent way to spread your company’s message to potential customers. Try using your Google phone to read the bar code in the OfficeDrop decal we’ve scanned above!

A few tips if you are going to scan your businesses Google Local 2D QR code:

  • Image quality matters. Scan you Google decal at at least 200 DPI. Anything less could result in an image that your customers are unable to properly scan with their phones.
  • If you have multiple locations, and have received multiple decals with 2D codes from Google, you should be careful not to mix up the decals. You don’t want place a code for one location at your other place of business.

Pixily in BusinessWeek - How Our Document Scanning and Document Management Service Was Started

Monday, October 26th, 2009

BusinessWeek Asks “How was your business idea hatched?”

OfficeDrop founder Prasad Thammineni talks about the moment when he came up with the idea behind OfficeDrop’s document scanning and document management service with BusinessWeek reporter, Amy Barett. Amy’s article, “Beyond Eureka,” lays out five steps for starting a business from interviews with 20 serial entrepreneurs. Amy suggests setting parameters for the business, brainstorming potential ideas, picking a winner idea, assessing feasibility, and testing a prototype.

Prasad explains how he was overwhelmed with paper during his MBA as Wharton and created his own system to scan, store and shred it. He realized that there was demand for this sort of a service when other students him to borrow his system. Realizing he was onto something, he interviewed a number of small businesses are discovered that there was a market for digitizing and managing small business’ paper. Thus, OfficeDrop’s document management and document scanning service was born!

A wide variety of companies are profiled - everything from clothing companies for people with limited mobility to an online service for creating computer games - including Cooper Martin, Sensible Garden, Sharendipity and Weardrobe.

Pixily Attends the Massachusetts State Legislature’s Innovation Day at the State House

Friday, October 23rd, 2009

On October 15th, the Massachusetts State Legislature hosted Innovation Day at the State House. The event presented a unique opportunity for Massachusetts-based technology companies to showcase their contributions in technological innovation as well as for the legislative body and staff to see how this innovation is relevant for economic growth in the Commonwealth. Special thanks to Senator Karen Spilka, Rep. Brian Dempsey and Rep. Michael Rodrigues and the New England Venture Capital Association for sponsoring this day.

OfficeDrop was one of a select group of technology companies invited to participate at Innovation Day.  We are very proud to have been invited to this event! It was great to see how excited Massachusetts’ politicians are about the health of innovation and startups. OfficeDrop garnered a large amount of interest as a prime example of both technological innovation in the Boston area, and as a “real labor” employer with aggressive expansion plans over the next 12 months.  Also of interest to the legislators and staff was OfficeDrop’s work with Boston-area public schools like Belmont Public, with whom OfficeDrop has been working to streamline  files and paperwork , making access to student information more efficient and cost-effective.

Some of the other really cool companies in attendance included:

Also, it was nice to see that irobots have a good sense of civic duty - here is one of their robots throwing away trash inside the State House.

iRobot picking up trash

iRobot picking up trash

The event centered around a panel discussion moderated by Scott Kirsner(The Boston Globe), in which Massachusetts technology company CEOs and venture capitalists discussed the impact of policy issues on venture capital as well as the importance of continued technological innovation that helps drive the Commonwealth’s economic growth. Scott did a nice job leading a conversation that touched on the difficulties of starting a company in Massachusetts, the unique advantages of the region and the excitement felt by the CEOs who were aggressively growing despite the tough economic environment.

Conquering the clouds - How to position your product to win awards

Monday, July 27th, 2009

Amazon just announced their annual web services Startup Challenge. The prizes include $50,000 in cash, $50,000 in AWS credits, mentoring sessions from AWS technical experts, and AWS Premium Support Gold for one year. OfficeDrop was a finalist in in this competition last year, and it helped us get some of our initial traction and press. We definitely recommend that other startups apply for this year’s competition. OfficeDrop has also had a fair amount of luck winning/making it to the finals in several other cloud computing awards, including winning MITX’s 2009 Cloud Computing Award and being announced as a winner of the 2009 AlwaysOn Global 250 in the category of cloud computing.

We are very excited to have been so successful in these competitions, and thought it might make sense to share some of our game plan for entering these competitions. Here are the steps we take when approching a competition that might be a good fit for OfficeDrop:

1) Research the award.
a) Understand the awards’s mission statement.
b) Who are the judges? What are their backgrounds? Media-types? VCs? Technologists?
c) Who were the past winners of the award? Do you see your company standing on the stage with them?
2) Develop a clear positioning statement on how and why your company is right for this award. Come up with 3 to 5 sentences. Combine the core mission of your company with the angle that the award judgement panel will eat up.
3) Ask questions. For many competitions, the coordinators are very helpful and want to try to encourage cool startups to participate.
a) Develop a dialog with the person organizing the competition. Organizing the event is probably both fun and stressful. Keep your interaction enjoyable and don’t over-do it.
b) Always thank the person once you’ve submitted your application.
4) Have a demo account for the judges. Ensure that the way you’ve set up the demo reinforces your positioning statement and play well to the award judges.
5) Use customer testimonials/case studies that reinforce your positioning. Judges like hearing about users who are having success with your service. Be specific. Judges like concrete data and metrics. If your product / solution saves time or money (whose doesn’t), don’t just state it. Quantify it.
6) Set up a timeline for completing the application.
a) Positioning statement - 3 weeks prior to the deadline
b) First draft - 2 weeks prior; get comments from the rest of the team/advisors
c) Final draft - 1 week prior; this draft should include all comments/revisions. Yes, this should include those painful edits needed to stay under the word limits.
d) Final proof read - Couple of days before the application is due. Don’t look a the document for a few days, and then read it end to end. Look for a logical flow/structure and make sure the application fits the positioning statement.
7) If the submission also includes a presentation, practice, practice and practice. Know thy audience. It is really important to have a crisp presentation that stays on message. Make sure you present why you are the most eligible to win the award. This is involved enough, that it is worth an entire blog post (or a book) by itself. I’ll do a follow-up blog post on the art of making the sell, later on.

This process has worked out pretty well for us, but does require real commitment. However, given the press that we’ve received and the positive attention and feedback we’ve gotten from customers after we’ve won these awards we feel that the work was worth it! Here’s to your chances in the next competition that you enter!! Good Luck!

Pixily system availability on Saturday AM

Saturday, July 11th, 2009

Early Saturday morning, we became aware of a DNS (Domain Name Server) misconfiguration issue, with our hosting provider, whereby requests to www.pixily.com were incorrectly sent to a parked domain, rather than to our servers. Because of this issue, users may not have been able to access the OfficeDrop website or the online application. Our servers were and are all healthy and running, and your documents, as always, are secure.

The issue has been resolved as of 10:30 AM EDT. However, given that the issue has to do with domain name resolution, it could be a few to several hours before the change is propagated to servers across the internet. So, depending on your Internet Service Provider, you may still be facing the issue. Unfortunately, there is nothing we can do to expedite the process. If you did have an issue accessing your account this morning, please restart your browser before trying again. My apologies for the inconvenience.

I would like to reiterate that this error was caused due to a configuration issue at the hosting provider. All your documents and your information are, as always, secure. We are following up with our hosting provider to ensure that this doesn’t happen again in the future. Please rest assured that we continue to work hard to provide secure anytime, anywhere access to your information.

Announcing a Pixily Webinar for Professional Organizers

Monday, June 8th, 2009

OfficeDrop for Professional Organizers

How professional organizers can offer digital file management services with OfficeDrop: A free webinar

June 19th

1:00 pm EST

Sign up for the webinar here

You can now see a video recording of the OfficeDrop for Professional Organizers’ web conference by clicking here.

OfficeDrop is excited to announce a webinar for Professional Organizers who are looking to better help their clients organize their paper. Paper documents and files are one of the most challenging aspects of any organization system. The OfficeDrop electronic file management system converts paper files into text-searchable digital documents - included in the price, OfficeDrop handles the difficult job of scanning paper files and converting them into digital PDF files. OfficeDrop’s award winning online document management service is an easy, quick and affordable paper management solution for consumers and small businesses. Learn how OfficeDrop integrates with a Professional Organizer’s business and how OfficeDrop can generate affiliate revenue for organizers.

In this webinar, we will discuss:

  • the basics of how the OfficeDrop service works - the paper mail in system, our document scanning system and more
  • how your clients can get their paper piles into the document management system
  • how document labels can help them make order out of their paper chaos
  • the advantages of the OfficeDrop search feature, and how it will help clients quickly and easily find the information/document they are looking for
  • how you as a Professional Organizer can develop a recurring relationship with your clients and how you can not only help them keep organized every month but how you can earn money every month they are using the system.

Including questions this paper management webinar should take just under 30 minutes.

Schools are trying to save money, time and trees by cutting back on paper.

Thursday, January 29th, 2009

Earlier this week, we learnt that hospitals become more efficient when going paperless. Today we are learning about schools. First hospitals, now schools. Talk about making an impact where you most need it.Kid happy about paperless

The Washington Post reports that “Some schools are taking a fresh look at “paperless” activities, meaning pretty much anything involving three-dimensional objects.” The article further reports that “A 5,000-sheet case of copier paper costs about $40. Envision copying 30 to 40 sheets every week for 500 students, and it’s easy to see how costs add up“.

Having some of the local schools in our area as our customers, we are very well familiar with the challenges that schools face and how digitizing academic information (student records, classroom assignments, etc,.) results in saving time, money, space and trees. We are encouraged by this trend.

You can read the complete Post article here.

Paperless hospitals could save 100,000 lives annually

Wednesday, January 28th, 2009

Reuters reports the results of a interesting study: “patients treated in hospitals that ranked highest in use of health information technology to manage patient records and physician notes were 15 percent less likely to die compared with patients in hospitals that ranked lower.Paperless Hospital

It also further notes that “If these results were to hold for all hospitals in the United States, computerizing notes and records might have the potential to save 100,000 lives annually,” Dr. Neil Poe of Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, who worked on the study, said in a statement.

It is great to see concrete data emerging on this front, and there cannot be a more direct and tangible impact of the benefits of going paperless for any small business.

The entire Reuters article can be found here.

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