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Use IT Asset Management for Software Compliance

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Less is not more when it comes to software compliance. Most companies want to do right, but many are not in compliance and admit they don’t have the time or budget to get there. But if they realized that an initial investment in an automated IT asset management system could save them time and money down the line, more would probably sign up today. A recent survey by King Research revealed that 60 percent of IT executives and managers believe they have unlicensed software deployed and 73 percent of that same group responded that they are not prepared for a software audit. Diane Hagglund, senior analyst at King Research, who authored the survey, says that a lot of IT professionals are doing piecemeal work that’s not end-to-end. These piecemeal tools don’t roll up into a report which could show which computers and software are not in compliance. “This survey paints a picture that screams for automated solutions.” The survey was sponsored by KACE, a Mountain View, Calif. company that specializes in IT asset management software solutions through their flagship product, KBOX. Rob Meinhardt, KACE co-founder and CEO says a lot of companies think they’re compliant, but they still feel there’s software out in their system that they don’t know about. He adds that many of them have antiquated inventory protocols that track inventory on the way in, but few companies feel confident that their technology can identify everything. “We find what’s on those machines and give the ability to meter and monitor, so customers are more certain of what they don’t know,” Meinhardt says. Aids negotiating with software vendors With KBOX, IT managers at a press of a button can slice and dice reports to see which computers have what software program on them and which staff members have been running what specific software program. For example, you may have 75 licenses for Adobe, but a KBOX report shows only 20 people using Adobe at any given time. With this data, you can renegotiate with software vendors. Michael Heuer, technology solution services customer support manager of Portland Community College and longtime KACE user, knows his records are better than those of his software vendors. “They change hands through acquisitions, which changes the starting point, but we know what our licensing arrangements are,” he says. “We can be very candid when negotiating for software and we ask what extra services we can get without spending a lot of money. Also, we proactively do compliance with our software vendors and have a strong partnership with them.” IT asset management helps save time and money Of those companies that are in compliance, some may not know that they can even save more money through purchasing an automated IT asset management system. These systems can figure out usage, which do not appear in vendor audits, and can show the IT manager which software programs are not being used on a daily basis. With this information, the IT department can better negotiate with software vendors and prevent the overbuying of seat licenses. “Vendors don’t care if software is being used,” says Kris Barker, CEO of Express Metrix, a Seattle-based software vendor specializing in asset management solutions. “They just care that it’s installed. Usage doesn’t matter to the vendor, but usage to the company does matter since it affects costs.” Express Metrix’s Express Software Manager Professional program has a control application function that enables companies to follow the concurrent licensing model so they can save money on software licenses. For instance, they may have 150 concurrent licenses, but their vendor requirement states they must only have 50 users running it at same time to meet compliance. The program lets companies save money, says Bob Ritger, IT Director of Payette Associates, Inc. a Boston-based architectural firm that uses Express Metrix. The company can make sure all employees are using the same version of software, such as Internet Explorer version 7.0 versus 6.0, he says. “The savings are significant since we’ve cut back on licenses we don’t need,” Ritger says. Avoid software noncompliance audits Peter Beruk, a consultant in compliance marketing with the Business Software Alliance (BSA), a Washington, D.C.-based industry group, notes that IT asset management plans can help stave off an outside audit by software companies or watchdog groups, such as BSA. The easy part is taking the inventory and the hard part is figuring out what the company has done historically when purchasing software licenses, Beruk says. For instance, if the company tracks its assets through expense reports, it will have a harder time finding its software license records, than if it uses an asset management tool. The BSA offers a large number of free tools available from its website, and it has contracted with several vendors including Express Metrix that will scan new software installations at no charge to track unlicensed software. “Any business is one phone call away from being reported or having unauthorized software, so it’s really incumbent on the business to know its own compliance with the software it’s using,” Beruk says.” Barker agrees that successful IT asset management comes from using a tool along with their planning and processes. “Successful companies understand IT asset management in that it affects everyone across the company and they buy in that it will make a huge difference in a company’s bottom line,” Barker says.

The Software License Police

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Don’t take let your business take software for granted. After you pay for the package, your obligation to the manufacturer doesn’t end — ever. Part of your agreement in buying software involves pledging to carry out the terms of the manufacturer’s license and warranties. And watch out if you violate those agreements. Having too many users for too few computers or letting staff copy software onto their home computers may be a violation of those terms that could cost your business. The Business Software Alliance (BSA), a Washington, D.C.-based industry group, sometimes audits firms for members. Fines can run up to $150,000, paid to the manufacturer, which adds up to a costly piece of software. Software is an intellectual property, like music, books, and art, and the real cost of the software is not the actual software, but the license to use it properly. The sooner companies understand and comply with the fine print in licensing agreements, they better equipped they’ll be in avoiding the consequences of software violations. Avoiding violating software terms Here are tips to avoid software licensing problems — and potentially costly fines — at your business: Set the tone from the top down. Top management must communicate to their staff the importance of keeping up-to-date with software licenses and must stress that violations will not be tolerated. Jenny Blank, BSA’s senior director of legal affairs, says employees must be informed of their company’s software policy so they can avoid the “I just didn’t know” excuse many violators commonly use. Appoint a software manager. This person’s responsibility is to retain files on all the software licenses and warranties, conduct audits, keep up with tools, resources and upgrades, take inventories, and distribute software property rights information to the staff. Use a managed software provider (MSP). Since managed service providers host their client’s software, software compliance is generally assured. Janel Ryan, product manager at SunGard Availability Services in Wayne, Penn., says that as a Microsoft Gold Partner, they have a blanket license key that reports to Microsoft how many licenses and customers they have. When companies hire an MSP to keep track of their long software key identifiers and work directly with software vendors, then the burden of software compliance doesn’t have to fall on a few people at a small company. Use BSA’s tools and resources. On BSA’s website, businesses can access the organization’s “Tools and Resources” page, which offers free 30-day trials of automated software audit tools, IT manager tracking/compliance sheets, guides about software piracy, and more.  On the software side R. “Ray” Wang, principal analyst for Forrester Research, says software companies can also make compliance easier by allowing companies to add users with the touch of a button, instead of having them wait weeks for approvals and contracts. “Doing so would save the vendor a lot of grief and the companies would add additional users as they grow,” Wang says. It’s easy for small businesses to ignore software compliance because some might consider software a support function that doesn’t directly affect their bottom line. Wang says most people don’t go out of their way to commit software violations, since some don’t know how many licenses they should have or what compliance laws they have broken. However, these excuses won’t exonerate a business that violates these agreements.

The Problems with Using Pirated Software

For entrepreneurs starting a company by the bootstraps, it may be tempting to minimize expenditures by utilizing a pirated copy of Microsoft Office or other popular programs. Pirates save thousands on licensing fees, avoid hassles like shipping and credit terms, and can produce enough copies of virtual tools on-demand to keep entire states, let alone small companies, running smoothly for decades. In truth, a whopping 35 percent of all software installed on PCs worldwide last year was illegitimate, according to a study conducted by the Framingham, Mass. research firm IDC for the Business Software Alliance (BSA), a trade group in Washington, D.C. The unauthorized distribution and use of copyrighted computer programs accounts for more than $34 billion in global losses annually, the report says. And while you shouldn’t be shooting colleagues sly glances over the boardroom table – America has the lowest piracy rate at 21 percent after all – there’s a valuable lesson to be learned here. Piracy, like any crime, just doesn’t pay. “Businesses face serious risks because of software piracy,” explains BSA spokesman Diane Smiroldo. “Apart from associated penalties, there’s the improper maintenance of accuracy and security, not to mention ethical problems, to consider. In the end, dealing with these issues will cost you more than purchasing the fully licensed software in the first place.” Here’s the problem with using pirated software in your business: It’s Illegal Guilty parties may be subject to civil litigation, arrest and/or criminal prosecution, with penalties ranging from fines as much as $250,000 to prison sentences of up to five years’ length. Under the law, companies can be held liable for employees’ actions as well. If an associate is caught installing unauthorized software or downloading it off the Internet, a lawsuit can be brought against your company for copyright infringement – even if management is unaware of the offense. What’s more, at any given time, the BSA has more than 600 open investigations within the U.S. and Canada. Cautions Smiroldo: “Unless you have no current or former disgruntled employees, you’re only one phone call away from becoming the target of an investigation.” Never mind the sky-high legal costs and dips in daily productivity associated with defending against such charges – the damage associated allegations alone can cause to fledging firms’ reputations is irreparable. Copyright holders may immediately freeze unauthorized usage of their applications as well, potentially shutting down your entire operation overnight and levying statuary damages of up to $150,000 for each program copied. No Patches, Fixes or Tech Support Even those who manage to avoid fines or litigation pay in the end, says Smiroldo, who further cites the following major drawbacks to utilizing illegally-copied content. Pirated software is unauthorized; its users, unacknowledged. Over the product(s)’ lifespan, you’ll receive no ongoing bug fixes, improvements or – worse, should show-stopping problems arise – technical support. Unlike manufacturers, cracking groups – teams of bedroom coders who remove copy protection and spread software via the Internet – further make no guarantees. Programs may be functionally crippled, prone to unexpected failure or work improperly, if at all. Anti-piracy checks hidden by vigilant programmers can also randomly corrupt data, insert embarrassing remarks or secretly report proof of illicit activities to the program’s creators. Freely-issued downloadable patches, or program updates, that correct errors and add bonus options, may not install to boot. Manuals, training cards and users’ guides are generally missing from pirated programs too. Good luck learning to master that new database or accounting package without proper documentation. Legal ownership of content created using stolen software isn’t the easiest thing to argue in court either. Profits generated from the usage of pirated software are additionally subject to seizure. And clients, should they become aware of such activities, have been known to justifiably pull contracts, cut ties to and even report offending firms to appropriate authorities, e.g. the FBI. It’s Anti-Entrepreneurial If you’ve started a business, you have a product that you want people to pay for. Same with Bill Gates. Same with Steve Jobs. If you use illegal copies of their work, what’s to prevent someone from using illegal copies of yours? “You wouldn’t drive a new car off the dealer’s lot or take a computer from a retail store without paying for it, would you?” asks Smiroldo. “Software developers spend years creating programs, and a portion of every dollar spent purchasing it is reinvested into R&D so newer, more advanced applications can be produced. Piracy harms both consumers and the industry.” To put things in perspective: According to the BSA, dropping piracy rates just 10 percent by 2009 would fuel the creation of 120,000 new IT jobs and $132 billion in additional economic growth – a bounty of commercial opportunity. In short, the use of pirated software – or other products – can create all sorts of troubles any sensible entrepreneur would smartly avoid. So the next time you look at a program’s price tag and blanch, remember this: Initial costs aside, you could be saving millions in hassles – not to mention attorneys’ fees — in the long run.

Bill’s Excellent Adventure

Many companies talk about getting close to the customer, but Microsoft pushed this idea to the extreme when it hired Nelle Steele to show up at 5 in the morning at the Milwaukee home of Tim Tucker. The owner of Air Engineering Inc., a supplier of industrial air compressor parts, is Microsoft’s model customer. Steele’s mission was to observe Tucker at close range, arriving as soon as he stepped out of the shower, then shadowing him until his workday ended at 10:30 p.m. Steele, a cultural anthropology Ph.D. student on leave from the University of Wisconsin, is one of five anthropologist-ethnographers (and the only one focused on entrepreneurs) that Microsoft hired full-time to conduct a field study. Called “Dawn to Dusk,” the study documents the work habits and thought processes of a species the software behemoth had never before tried to understand: owners and employees of small businesses. In tailing her quarry, Steele discovered, to her surprise, that small companies kept vital information in disconnected places — what she called “data silos” — from scribbled notes on scraps of paper to files on a PC that could be accessed by only one employee. This made it harrowing to try to answer basic questions like, “How did we do in the Northeast last quarter?” “I saw the pain that data silos caused day to day,” says Steele. Her work is part of Microsoft’s $2 billion research and development effort aimed at convincing these tribes of technological primitives to join the modern world. While most of that is earmarked to improve products, a lot of it is going to spreading the word. That’s in addition to two recent acquisitions — Great Plains and Navision business management software at another $2.4 billion — to enhance its offerings for small business. Even for Microsoft, with $50 billion in cash in the bank, that’s a major investment. Microsoft has started trying to care about these customers. Why us, you might ask, and why now? Partly it’s because “enterprise” customers, those that have more than 1,000 employees and 500 PCs, aren’t spending on tech the way they used to. So the industry’s top names, including IBM, Hewlett-Packard, and Dell, have started going after the littler fish. Even among this crowd, though, Microsoft’s push into small business is remarkably fervent and richly funded — and for a good reason: competition. There are two parts to the story that follows: the first is the challenge Microsoft faces and the criticism it has endured in the past. The second is what Microsoft is doing — with a degree of success — about both. Microsoft’s push into small business is remarkably fervent and richly funded — and for a good reason: competition. Today, 90% of small and midsize businesses run on the Microsoft platform, says Mika Krammer, an analyst at Gartner, a research firm. That’s a stranglehold on this enormous market of 8 million companies in the U.S. and 40 million worldwide. Globally, these companies pay almost as much for info tech — $400 billion a year — as America spends on defense. But despite its long history of dominance, Microsoft faces a looming threat from Linux and the insurgent open-source “free software” movement. Linux could do what the Justice Department couldn’t: end the era of Microsoft’s near monopoly and strip a sizable chunk of its sales and profits in the coming decade. Many industry analysts and media critics think that Linux is more secure and reliable than Windows, a prime target for hackers. Entrepreneurs have been paying close attention to the debate. Two of their biggest role models — Amazon and Google — now rely on Linux to run their websites. At a Yankee Group conference in San Francisco in March, small-business owners commiserated with one another about Microsoft’s disappointing customer support and their dislike of paying licensing and upgrade fees. They griped about how Microsoft’s new releases often seemed more like beta software — test versions with plenty of kinks — than reliable finished products, and they bemoaned the software’s vulnerability to viruses and the constant need for patches. With mighty IBM putting its clout behind Linux, some small businesses are starting to convert, often with impressive results. Satellite Records, a 35-employee music retailer in New York City, made the switch after IT director Steve Shapero found Microsoft’s software simply too high-maintenance. “It’s like American cars and Japanese cars,” says Shapero. “Do you want a Chevy Impala or a Honda Accord? It’s great that Detroit and Microsoft are finally making things that don’t suck, but we’d rather have the state of the art.” Shapero said that Microsoft server software would require a full-time person to keep it running, which the company didn’t want. “As an independent consultant I like to set up a Linux box, deploy it, and ideally never hear from my client again,” he says. Other customers were motivated by cost savings from not having licensing fees. Westport Rivers Winery, a 20-person family business in Westport, Mass., cut its annual tech budget by 60% with Linux, according to an IBM case study. Rob Meyer, Internet director for Anaconda Sports, a 200-person sporting goods distributor in Lake Katrine, N.Y., says it saves around $3,000 a year on licensing fees now. What’s more, small-business owners still feel a residue of fear from Microsoft’s long history of abusing power in its quest for total dominance. They remember how the company tried to hijack their websites in 2001 with SmartTags, an aborted Windows feature that would have turned many of their own words into links to Microsoft’s sites and advertisers’ without asking their consent. And they read about Microsoft’s vendetta against guitar-string maker Ernie Ball, based in San Luis Obispo, Calif. Four years ago, the founder’s son and CEO, Sterling Ball, was a victim of a “nail your boss” campaign by the Business Software Alliance, a trade group that Microsoft co-founded. BSA raided the operation and found that a few of its 80 computers had unpaid copies of Microsoft products. Ball said it was an accident, a case of unused programs left over on old PCs when they were passed from engineers to clerks. But he still had to pay $90,000 in fines and legal fees. Microsoft sent the news clips to other small companies as a threat. Since switching to Linux, Ball has saved more money than he lost in the contretemps. “The money that I’m not spending on new versions of Office and on fighting viruses is going into marketing and R&D,” he says. Now that it fully grasps the Linux threat, Microsoft isn’t being so heavy-handed with small businesses. Instead, the company is trying shrewdly to make its own claims of parity or superiority. Executives dispute Linux’s claims of better security and reliability and point out that “free software” isn’t actually free because you need to hire people to install, maintain, and customize it. (That’s how rivals, particularly IBM, are looking to profit.) Still, Linux is “a real threat, and we take it seriously,” says Darren Huston, the Microsoft vice president who leads U.S. initiatives for small and midsize businesses. The stakes are stunningly high — a $400 billion-a-year global market! — and this is going to be an epic battle waged over a long time. Krammer says that Microsoft will continue to dominate that market for several years because smaller customers are often slow to switch to new software and most buyers won’t really consider Linux until it becomes more mainstream. Besides, there aren’t yet many business programs based on Linux, and those that are available, such as Sun’s StarOffice, aren’t as good as Microsoft’s offerings. Microsoft remains vulnerable, however, because small-business owners resent being captive to such a powerful force and not having viable choices. A January Yankee Group survey of companies with fewer than 500 employees found that 43% of them are concerned about becoming overly reliant on Microsoft’s products and services; of those respondents, 72% were actively seeking alternative vendors. “Microsoft’s challenge,” says Krammer, “is to go from being a necessary evil to something that small businesses like to invest in.” Improvements are being made, but there is always room for more. In April Microsoft launched a revamped and much easier-to-use Web portal at www.microsoft.com/smallbusiness. Still, you might have to wait half an hour when calling customer service. Even more frustrating is how Microsoft keeps smaller customers at arm’s length by forcing them to work through intermediaries — local consultants who sell Microsoft’s software, set it up, show buyers how to use it, or write their own software to work with it. There are some 325,000 of these folks, who go by awkward acronyms and names such as “VARs” (value-added resellers), “ISVs” (independent software vendors), and “certified partners” (individuals who have passed training courses run by Microsoft). Small businesses hook up with these “partners” mainly through word of mouth, but if you’re an entrepreneur with little tech savvy, it’s hard to know whether your accountant’s sister-in-law or your lawyer’s fraternity brother is the best person to apply software to the challenges of your business. To help, Microsoft’s newly redesigned Web page has a “partner finder” to identify local consultants and their areas of training and expertise. The cottage industry of Microsoft’s partners is getting some big new players. Both HP and Dell are starting to hawk their consulting services to businesses with fewer than 500 employees. IBM is reaching out to entrepreneurs too, but rarely dips below the 500- to 1,000-employee range. While all three companies embrace Linux, they also promote Microsoft’s products as part of their overall packages for clients. Although finding the right partner and setting up a new software system can be stressful, there’s a compelling reason for sticking it out: Microsoft now offers many extremely useful products for small and midsize businesses. Microsoft divides this huge market into two parts: The 7.5 million “small” businesses with fewer than 50 employees, with no more than 25 PCs and with a maximum of $5 million in annual revenue. The 330,000 “midmarket” companies with fewer than 1,000 employees have up to 500 PCs and up to $500 million in revenue. The smallest businesses probably don’t have a PC network or even a professional info-tech employee. These start-ups can benefit from Small Business Center (formerly bCentral), a set of Web-based services hosted by Microsoft on its own computers. The pitch is that it’s like hiring Microsoft to be your info-tech department for a monthly or annual rental fee, usually after a 30-day free trial. First developed in 1999, the services — aimed at businesses with fewer than 25 employees — have quickly become popular, attracting more than 2 million users in the U.S., Microsoft says. One of them is Jack Marshall, president of Pastry Chef Central in Boca Raton, Fla. His small family business sells baking and pastry tools through pastrychef.com. “It’s supercheap,” Marshall says of Microsoft’s “shopping-cart” services, which cost only $249 a year (excluding credit card verification fees, which are billed by a third-party partner). “You can’t beat it.” And even though Microsoft can’t give the little guy all the powerful features of an Amazon, “they’re moving toward that,” he says. Marshall particularly likes the new “order status link” that sends e-mail purchase confirmations to customers with Web links so they can check on delivery without having to contact the company: “That’s been a fabulous timesaver for us.” Besides time, there’s the money: Microsoft says that the top 100 customers for Small Business Center’s e-commerce service averaged $43,000 in revenue last December. Small Business Center also offers ListBuilder, which enables companies to send mass e-mails to customers to let them know about sales or other news. Microsoft handles the mailing, then tracks who opened the messages and were inspired to visit the sender’s website. The cost: $29.95 a month or $299 a year. Microsoft surveyed 100 ListBuilder clients and found that businesses sent e-mails to an average of 30,000 customers, though some had amassed lists of more than 100,000 names. (Microsoft says it does not keep e-mail addresses for its own use.) One of Microsoft’s most useful hosted Web services is SharePoint, which allows colleagues to share information and collaborate with one another and their customers. SharePoint is sadly underused by small businesses, but it’s a smart idea. In a Microsoft case study, Jeff Williams, president and owner of Carolina’s Choice, a furniture manufacturer in Rocky Mount, N.C., says SharePoint allowed his company to make up-to-date sales information available 24 hours a day to a network of 700 furniture dealers (the cost: $19.95 introductory price, then $39.95 monthly). As fledgling companies grow, Microsoft wants to wean them from paying monthly rental fees to investing in licensed software installed on PCs (which is how Microsoft has always made most of its money). The staple of the desktop PC has long been Microsoft Office (Word, Excel, Outlook, and PowerPoint), which boasts 400 million users worldwide. “Everyone I hire out of college can use it,” says Eric Meslow, president of Timbercon, a 30-person, $4.5 million fiber optics manufacturer in Portland, Oreg. That gives Microsoft a big advantage over Linux, which often requires training. The latest twist: Last October, Microsoft introduced Office Small Business Edition 2003, which lists for $449, while earlier Office users can pay an upgrade price of $279. The prices are up to $50 higher than the standard version, but Microsoft throws in two compelling programs. First, Business Contact Manager consolidates all the information you have about a customer, a dramatic improvement over the haphazard data silos discovered by Nelle Steele that could spell lost leads or missed sales opportunities. The program can identify long-neglected sales accounts or alert you to what’s coming up in the pipeline in the next seven days. Timbercon’s Meslow says that before his salespeople had this “sales funnel” feature, it took them an hour a day to monitor their accounts. Now it takes “about two minutes,” he says. Meslow figures that saves a total of 20 hours a month for his typical salesperson, who generates an average of $150 to $200 an hour. Office’s other addition, Publisher, is a tool for creating websites, e-mail newsletters, and other marketing materials so you don’t have to hire professional design firms or printers. Timbercon saved $72,000 in the first year by designing portions of its website and product data sheets. “Publisher was one of the larger surprises of the new line for us,” Meslow says. “Five years ago you could tell if something was created in Publisher. Now it looks professionally done, and it’s relatively easy to use.” It’s also fast, he says. A project that once took three weeks for outside firms to design and print can be created in-house within a week. “Five years ago you could tell if something was created in Publisher. Now it looks professionally done.” Terry Szpak, VP of marketing and sales at Telesystems West, an 18-person, $2.5 million company in Bellevue, Wash., that sells and installs phone systems, estimates sales rose $5,000 to $10,000 a month thanks to Publisher. Over its first dozen years, Telesystems had put together a database of 5,000 customers, but employees were too busy to create or manage promotions to sell additional products. With Publisher they were able to turn out flyers and e-mails. “It’s hitting people who already trust us,” Szpak says. “Marketing to our existing customer base has been a boon.” Office and Business Center provide benefits to companies with multiple PCs hooked up only through the Internet or what’s known as the “sneaker net” — people simply walking around, a likely scenario for a start-up. But as the business grows, even greater opportunities can come from setting up a PC network with a separate machine dedicated as a server. About 7 million of America’s 8 million small businesses still don’t have a server, according to Microsoft. It charges $599 to license its Small Business Server software for five users, and Dell and HP both sell the hardware with this software already installed for under $1,000. (Customers can later expand by licensing up to 75 users before they have to switch to a more capable product.) The investment usually pays for itself quickly. A server makes it easier to back up data that might otherwise reside on isolated PCs. It lets employees look at each other’s calendars and contacts, hook up to the network remotely, and share software for business functions such as accounting and inventory. Having a server enables a company to host a SharePoint intranet, which is how the Fischer Group changed the way it did business. The 23-person, $10 million Orange, Calif., food manufacturer representative firm had relied on old-fashioned paper files for purchase orders, contracts, contact information, and memos. They were often misplaced. Worse, employees could only get to the files during business hours. “Our biggest problem was wasting time and money physically handling job documents,” says Gene Austin, the company’s general manager. “It was like putting $100 bills in a pile and setting them on fire.” Once Fischer digitized this material, finding information and responding to customers became easier and faster. Small Business Server also provides security for a company’s network, an area where many small businesses are turning to Linux, including Timbercon, which runs its firewall on an open-source software server. Even though Microsoft still relies on its partners, it’s trying much harder to make direct contact with its customers. The company now offers free seminars for small businesses in 160 cities, many of them far-flung rural outposts like Casper, Wyo. Cynthia Bates, Microsoft’s general manager for U.S. small business, says that everyone on her team has to spend one day a month working for a customer’s company to see what daily life is like. “We want to humanize Microsoft rather than be the company in the backroom,” says her boss, Darren Huston. Meanwhile, our intrepid cultural anthropologist Nelle Steele has begun a new two and a half year study called Small Business Better Together, which is applying technology to three small companies in the Seattle area. The owner of one of the three didn’t want customers to wind up with voice mail; he insisted that an employee take a message. But these employees relied on sticky notes applied to computers or chairs. When these fell off, the customer’s needs would go ignored. Microsoft responded by buying new hardware and donating software. Now, Steele reports, “people are taking messages for each other in Outlook.” The notes haven’t gone away entirely. Some things stick for a long time, and no amount of technology will change that. Sidebar: Microsoft a la carte Info-tech options for your small business Small Business Center (formerly bCentral) What It Is: Online services for hosting e-commerce websites, processing customers’ orders, developing sales leads, and launching e-mail marketing campaigns Pros And Cons: Microsoft rents many useful Web-based services on a monthly or annual basis, though the other options — especially eBay — are popular with small merchants and with customers. Alternatives: Amazon, eBay, Yahoo Office Small Business Edition 2003 What It Is: Tools for creating and editing documents, spreadsheets, presentations, and marketing materials; managing e-mail and calendars; and tracking contacts and leads Pros And Cons: Everyone’s already trained on Microsoft’s excellent suite, the global standard with 400 million users, but OpenOffice is a viable option — and it’s free. Alternatives: OpenOffice, Sun’s StarOffice Small Business Server What It Does: Runs and provides security for PC networks Pros And Cons: It’s a good product. But Microsoft charges $599 for five users, while open-source rivals like Apache are free — and critics say they offer lower maintenance costs and better security. Alternatives: Apache, EmergeCore IT-100, Novell’s Small Business Suite, Red Hat Linux Alan Deutschman is a writer living in San Francisco and Roanoke, Va.