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Not-quite SaaS but...

Last post 08-30-2006, 8:39 AM by atomlinson. 1 replies.
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  •  08-25-2006, 9:02 AM 109

    Not-quite SaaS but...

    I am no SaaS-strategy expert but I work for a SaaS ISV and have been a student and propenent of the Internet as a transformative tool since before the inception of the World Wide Web.

    It seems to me that a lot of the sea change in attitudes in the general population towards SaaS and SaaS-like offerings comes from much simpler origins. In the last 6 years since the .com boom and bust there has been gradual but overwhelming upsurge in the use of Web-based services that go beyond simple information gathering and e-commerce. From online banking and tax preperation to personal services like Evite, iTunes, flickr to online social networking/gaming people are getting comfortable using the the internet in deeper ways than as a simple research/buy tool.

    I believe that this has created a gradual change in perception that has impacted many more people at a deeper level than all the talk of "The Network is the Computer" by technophiles. This creeping but inexorable blurring of the boundaries between my computer (or phone or Nintendo DS) and the Internet is what makes SaaS make sense to millions of people who don't know what SaaS is.

    People are experiencing the value of "doing things on the web" at a very personal level and I believe this will cause them to accept SaaS solutions without a second thought. We are approaching a time where many people won't question running SaaS solutions because they are inherently comfortable using the web to get things done.

    Mark Heaney

    SMBLive
     

  •  08-30-2006, 8:39 AM 180 in reply to 109

    Re: Not-quite SaaS but...

    Related to this I think the actual and perceived utility of desktop apps is dropping as more powerful web services and online applications proliferate, even as the feature set of those desktop apps continues to grow. Desktop apps are still islands of functionality and provide the user an isolated experience as opposed online apps, which are more and more integrated into the way people are increasingly working, which is on the web. I'm fairly positive that client-side basic productivity and business apps are on the way out. It will take awhile, but the process has already started. Witness Google's basic suite of services for small businesses.
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