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    Presuming The Worst Is Coming, What Can You Do?

    Written by

    Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols
    Published January 15, 2001
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      My buddy Jack the CIO is as unhappy as I was when I watched the Oakland Raiders make mincemeat of my Miami Dolphins earlier this month. He had had a big 2001 budget ready, complete with a corporate W2K server rollout and a half dozen senior-level hires. Then, his firms board had a “come-to-Jesus” meeting with the CEO. Now his budgets been rolled back to 2000 levels, and hes been told that he cant even fill his existing vacancies.

      Imagine how his technology partners feel. Presuming more cuts like that are coming, what can you do? Where can you go to make sure that income keeps coming in, even if an economic downturn spawns a downpour of bad business news?

      The answer: service. If things go badly, people will cut back on purchases and deployments, but theyre going to need to make the most of what theyve got. Thats where you come in.

      To start with, forget about counting on major new deployments for profits. If they come, consider them gravy for the main course. For the meat and potatoes, focus on building up network services. In particular, emphasize the cost savings of outsourcing to customers. But dont confuse outsourcing with the ASP model. I think performance and security issues will stunt the ASP model, but traditional outsourcing markets should remain strong in a slow economy.

      Theres even money in break-and-fix services and basic network administration. Profits may be lower than a snakes belly in those markets, but youll make more money maintaining your customers infrastructure this year than you will from selling them Pentium 4s and Windows 2000 Advanced Servers. I also think that keeping your old technology skills sharp—like maintaining an NT certification instead of moving up to W2K—will serve you well in 2001.

      That isnt to say that you cant make money from new technology. But youd be better-off pushing technologies that profit from services instead of up-front prices. For example, I think hard times will be great times for anyone pushing Linux. With its low up-front costs and more-powerful enterprise features, the new Linux 2.4 should prove a very attractive proposition for customers that want to upgrade their networks without paying a small fortune in client-access license fees.

      I also think that some wireless technology could do well for you this year. Providing services for e-mail hosting for RIMs incredibly popular Blackberry e-mail handset and the hot new i-Mode wireless protocol for Web surfing strikes me as the sensible way to ensure profits.

      Just remember, the key wont be the new technology per se. It will be servicing both the old and the most-bang-for-the-buck new that will spell success in 2001, even if the economy does go down the toilet—along with Jacks lost hires.

      Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols
      Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols
      I'm editor-at-large for Ziff Davis Enterprise. That's a fancy title that means I write about whatever topic strikes my fancy or needs written about across the Ziff Davis Enterprise family of publications. You'll find most of my stories in Linux-Watch, DesktopLinux and eWEEK. Prior to becoming a technology journalist, I worked at NASA and the Department of Defense on numerous major technological projects.

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