Search /
Docfinder:
Advanced search  |  Help  |  Site map
RESEARCH CENTERS
SITE RESOURCES
Click for Layer 8! No, really, click NOW!
Networking for Small Business
TODAY'S NEWS
Report: Head of Microsoft's online group leaves for Juniper
IBM, Oracle and SAP sued over server software technology patents
More outages hit Amazon's S3 storage service
Details of major Internet flaw posted by accident
VPNs: Six burning questions
Micro-grids for power could stave off telco outages in disasters
No excuses -- encrypt all laptops
IBM/Lotus sharpens weapon for unified communications battle
Watch out Cisco: Here comes Brocade/Foundry
Brocade's Foundry buy will boost Fibre Channel over Ethernet market
IT project management yields savings for energy company
Oracle unveils access management suite
San Francisco's mayor gets back keys to the network
Experts debate NAC: usefulness versus cost
IT worker confidence hits all-time low
Start-up led by Sun veterans readies data access for Web 2.0 world
Applications /

Compendium /

A vendor that cares

Related linksToday's breaking news
Send to a friendFeedback


Network World Fusion 06/26/03

Adam Kalsey uses Atomz's free search engine on his site. He recently ran up against the company's 500-page limit for free search engines and complained (on the site, natch) that the next step up was a $15,000 service.

Turns out that the free service is a sort of legacy app, Kalsey writes. Like many dot-coms, Atomz started off by offering a free service in the hopes users would like it enough to upgrade to a paid version. But they didn't. To survive, Atomz changed its focus from trying to sell to small to mid-sized companies to offering industrial-strength search tools to enterprises.

"When most companies do this, they notify all their free customers that they are discontinuing the service. Sometimes they suggest alternative services, but many times the just kick their free users to the street corner. What Atomz decided to do was different. Even though there is no legitimate business case for doing so, they continued to allow existing customers to use their free service. They also grandfathered in all their paying customers and continue to provide them services at their existing pricing levels."

And with 60,000 of them, that's no insubstantial cost in servers and bandwidth, he notes.

Back to Compendium

Comments

Post a comment

Name:


E-mail address:


URL:


Comments:


Remember info?




NWFusion offers more than 40 FREE technology-specific email newsletters in key network technology areas such as NSM, VPNs, Convergence, Security and more.
Click here to sign up!
New Event - WANs: Optimizing Your Network Now.
Hear from the experts about the innovations that are already starting to shake up the WAN world. Free Network World Technology Tour and Expo in Dallas, San Francisco, Washington DC, and New York.
Attend FREE
Your FREE Network World subscription will also include breaking news and information on wireless, storage, infrastructure, carriers and SPs, enterprise applications, videoconferencing, plus product reviews, technology insiders, management surveys and technology updates - GET IT NOW.
* HOME    * RESEARCH CENTERS     * NEWS     * EVENTS

Contact us | Terms of Service/Privacy | How to Advertise
Reprints and links | Partnerships | Subscribe to NW
About Network World, Inc.

Copyright, 1994-2006 Network World, Inc. All rights reserved.