Intranets.com expands lineup with conferencing
ASP adds Web and audio conferencing capabilites
Follow @infoworldHosted collaboration software provider Intranets.com Inc. plans to announce Monday the addition of Web and audio conferencing capabilities to its service, a move it hopes will help it compete against Microsoft Corp. and other vendors for business from price-sensitive small and mid-market companies.
Intranets.com, based in Boston, claims a customer base of 180,000 users, making it one of the largest vendors in the growing ranks of ASPs (application service providers) targeting small companies and departments of larger enterprises. ASPs traditionally offer fewer features and customization options than do traditional on-premise software deployments, but can save customers on installation and management costs and hassles.
On a monthly subscription basis, Intranets.com offers a suite of collaborations tools including individual and group calendars, file sharing and database repositories. This week the company adds to its line-up, for an additional fee, audio and Web conferencing tools, allowing users to share applications and presentations.
At $99 per month for Web conferencing for up to 25 simultaneous users, and $0.12 per minute for audio conferencing, Intranets.com's conferencing applications cost less than those from Microsoft and several other vendors also targeting midmarket customers.
"Web conferencing is complicated, and it's often priced for peak usage," said Karen Leavitt, Intranets.com's vice president of marketing. "That's the problem we want to solve for our customers: make it easy and affordable."
One customer, American Infertility Association (AIA) administrator Melinda Micciola, said her organization is looking forward to taking advantage of the new conferencing offerings.
"We do a lot of educational chats right now," she said. "Now, with this potential, we'll be able to have people interact. We could have a keynote speaker and broadcast that, for anyone willing to sign on and join the conference call."
Micciola's New York-based nonprofit organization became an Intranets.com customer several months ago, after she surveyed available collaboration options for connecting the AIA's five employees. Traditional software packages, including Microsoft's SharePoint products, were too expensive for the group, she said.
"We've been very lucky finding this," Micciola said. "It was the one we've been able to afford, and the programs have been user-friendly."
Intranets.com's plan is to stay focused on the needs of companies with up to 250 users scattered throughout several office locations, Leavitt said.
"We are aimed very squarely at the small-business market," she said. "We will never be the intranet for all General Motors (Corp.), but one of its divisions has a half-dozen sites with us."
Intranets.com came by its small-business collaboration mission in a roundabout way. The eight-year-old company began life selling shrink-wrapped software. Business was slow, and when ASPs became the dot-com rage in 1999, the company launched its Web site, offering free collaboration software under an advertising-supported business model. Like many other online service providers, the company soon discovered that an advertising-supported business model wasn't a profitable one.









