New Member Interview with Wave Accounting

SIIA recently welcomed, Canadian company, Wave Accounting to the membership. I spoke with their Co-founder and CEO, Kirk Simpson, to learn more about their business. Read the full interview below.

Rhianna: Welcome to SIIA. Tell me about Wave Accounting and what differentiates you from other accounting/payroll products?

Kirk: Wave Accounting is a free online accounting application that is ideal for small businesses with 9 employees or less, as well as bigger companies. Wave offers small business owners easy accounting with unlimited invoicing, expense tracking, reporting, personal finance, multi-user/multi-business access and more—all 100% free. More than 100,000 small businesses have signed up for Wave in more than 200 countries around the world. In its first year alone, Wave eliminated 1,173,712 minutes of manual data entry. The company also recently secured $5 million in Series A funding in Q4 of 2011.

We differentiate ourselves from the competition with smart technology and an innovative pricing model. Some competitors have incorporated some of the features we’re using (bank data aggregation, for instance), but none of them has the whole package, and none have the focus that we do, of fundamentally changing the user experience for small businesses with accounting needs.

Rhianna: I see that you are planning to launch a US version of your product later this year. What hurdles have you faced taking the product across borders?

Kirk: Wave Accounting is already in over 200 countries, including the US. Our Payroll product (Wave Payroll), is scheduled to launch in the US later in 2012. Payroll is a far more challenging product to take across borders because of the tax & legislative compliance that is required. In order to meet that challenge, we’ve been focusing on hiring talent and forming partnerships with organizations to help get us there.

Rhianna:Last quarter you were recognized with a couple of industry awards, including the Deloitte Companies-to-Watch Awards, and the People’s Choice at CIX. What has that type of recognition meant to your business?

Kirk:It’s been incredibly helpful in that these awards have generated a lot of additional awareness for Wave that we might not have otherwise received.  Additionally, winning these awards has also given us credibility in the market, which has led to both increased customer acquisition AND customer retention.

Rhianna: Now you have an interesting business model, your accounting product is absolutely free. You monetize from advertising within your product. What feedback have you received from customers and advertisers alike?

Kirk:As you can imagine, our customers LOVE the fact that Wave is free. We target very small businesses (under 9 employees), so keeping an eye on their expenses is obviously top of mind for many of them. Our customers tend to be very web savvy, and often rely on many other free web-based tools (like Dropbox for example) to use in their business. From an advertising perspective, the offers that we serve up in the application are extremely relevant to small business owners, so they appreciate that not only do they have a great free accounting application, but they’re also getting some very rich & exclusive offers on products & services that they are probably already spending money on for their business (office supplies, small business banking products, email marketing services, etc.)  From an advertisers perspective, Wave has provided them with an ultra-targeted audience, and they’ve been very happy with the results. We’re able to match targeted offers against aggregated spending levels in various categories.


Rhianna Collier is VP for the Software Division at SIIA.

 

Tip #3: 10 Tips to Maximizing Your Time at All About the Cloud

Tip 3: Leverage Your Time in San Francisco

For those of you who have attended All About the Cloud in the past, you know how much we pack into the program. Between conference sessions, networking activities, and business meetings, schedules fill up quickly. If this is your first time attending All About the Cloud we promise to keep you busy. Plan now to leverage both the audience we have gathered in San Francisco and also your visit to the Bay Area. While the conference will keep you busy on Wednesday and Thursday, utilize Monday, Tuesday and Friday to schedule other business meetings, maximizing your time in San Francisco. In fact, we have organized a number of pre-conference activities on Tuesday that you can leverage for meetings and networking. Speed Networking is a MUST! http://www.siia.net/aatc/2012/schedule.asp


Rhianna Collier is VP for the Software Division at SIIA.

 

Tip #2: 10 Tips to Maximizing Your Time at All About the Cloud

Tip 2: Do your pre-conference planning NOW!

We all know that time can get away from us. Business is booming and calendars are packed! I, like many of you, have waited until the last minute to plan my participation at an event, paying additional fees and ending up in a hotel across town. You can avoid any last minute scrambling by taking care of some pre-conference details now.

  1. Avoid any confusion when you arrive at the conference by registering now, not to mention you can take advantage of the early-bird savings.
  2. Plan to bring other colleagues and/or employees who would greatly benefit from attending the conference. In fact, you can save money with a corporate registration package, good for three people.
  3. Make reservations for transportation and hotel early. The Palace Hotel is a San Francisco landmark and we have negotiated a great room rate for our attendees. We fully expect the hotel to sell out of rooms as they have each year in the past so book now to avoid extra travel costs and time if forced to stay at a different hotel.
  4. Identify your goals for the conference. What is it that you want to get out of the 3 days? Are there certain people or companies you want to meet or specific knowledge you want to walk away with? Identifying your goals in advance will help you pick specific sessions you won’t want to miss and identify the companies/attendees you want to meet.
  5. Familiarize yourself with the sponsors. Take a look at the companies and determine who you want to meet with at the conference.
  6. Make sure all the networking activities are on your calendar. When you register you will have options for speed networking, welcome reception and the offsite extravaganza, all of which are, not just signature events, they are a must!

In the coming weeks we will be rolling out our online conference attendee portal where you will be able to request meetings with our sponsors and attendees. If you do the pre-planning now you will be ready to roll when we make this service available and on your way to maximizing your participation at All About the Cloud.


Rhianna Collier is VP for the Software Division at SIIA.

 

Interview with New SIIA Member, Indicee

I recently had a chance to chat with Mark Cunningham, CEO of Indicee, a Vancouver based startup and new member to SIIA. Read my interview below for some interesting insights into the Business Analytics space.

Rhianna: Welcome to SIIA. Tell me a bit about Indicee and what differentiates you from other BI vendors.

Mark: Indicee is a cloud-based business intelligence (BI) platform. The Indicee app allows business users to bring data together from multiple sources to answer critical business questions. The platform allows partners to easily add reporting and analytics to their own applications and services.

Much of what makes us different comes from our experience. I was a founding member of Crystal Services back in the 1990s, and many of the Indicee team were instrumental in making the products from Crystal and Business Objects so successful.

Our mission today is to make BI simpler, more effective and affordable for any size of organization. For years, the BI industry has been dominated by on-premise tools that are prohibitively complex and beyond the budget of all but the biggest enterprises. We want to change that. With decades of experience, we understand the pain and frustration caused by trying to implement and maintain these monolithic solutions. We built the Indicee platform to address the challenges posed by traditional BI and replace them with something agile and user-friendly, but just as powerful.

Rhianna: Part of what you have done is to design the company around partnering. Why is building a partner ecosystem so important to your overall goals? And, what makes an attractive partner for Indicee?

Mark: Our success at Crystal was based on creating the leading OEM reporting tool in the market. Partnering is in our DNA. The difference today, is the number of ways in which we can set up partnerships. Cloud is now our channel and the partner ecosystem consists of resellers, application partners and solution providers, not just OEM opportunities.

We designed the Indicee platform with partners in mind from the start, so we’re able to offer a dedicated acquisition program and a more comprehensive API than other cloud BI vendors. This allows ISVs to embed white-labelled reporting directly into their applications, or use Indicee as a side-by-side value-added analytics service.

Building a healthy partner ecosystem is an important way to extend our market reach, more quickly than we can achieve through marketing efforts alone. There is also a great demand for embedded analytics right now. The nature of cloud computing means that many ISVs have user data locked within their apps. As more customers try to access this data, the pressure is on vendors to deliver in-app reports and analytics, even when they have no BI expertise. That’s where the Indicee partner program can help.

An attractive partner is any organization that recognizes the value of analytics for their customers, and the opportunity for a new revenue source. Indicee works best when implemented by industry experts who can combine their marketplace expertise with world-class reporting.

Rhianna: What are some of the biggest hurdles companies face when building or adopting BI systems or solutions?

Mark: For companies implementing traditional enterprise BI tools, the adoption hurdles are high and numerous. That’s why penetration rates for BI have been stuck at an underwhelming 20% for over a decade. The sheer complexity of the software means that these large-scale implementation projects tend to last months, sometimes years, usually cost a small fortune and have to be owned by the IT department, even when complete. This creates a permanent IT bottleneck and prevents BI ever coming into the hands of the business users who need it. We advocate a better way: projects that start small and scale, tools that are accessible to tech-savvy business users, and agile solutions that are affordable for any organization.

As for ISVs considering in-app analytics, it rarely makes commercial sense to build a BI solution in-house. It requires a highly specialized skillset, and due to the inherent complexity of data, is a very lengthy undertaking. But until recently, the alternatives weren’t ideal either. The product guys had a choice between open source tools, which need a great deal of customization and ongoing maintenance, or traditional, on-premise tools, which require an army of developers to set up, and are completely at odds with SaaS pricing models, development cycles and ethos. Tools like Indicee provide a third option: easily embedded, flexible and cloud-based analytics.

Rhianna: There is so much talk out there around analytics, BI, and Big Data. How do you see the BI landscape changing in the next year?

Mark: We believe that the future for BI is the cloud. However, simply putting the current, on-premise solutions in the cloud wont’ solve any of the typical BI problems. So, while the mega-vendors tiptoe towards the cloud with the same old toolkit, the dedicated cloud vendors are evolving a new breed of agile, inexpensive apps. This is causing a shift away from the traditionally complex, static solutions, towards more embedded analytics, specific solution apps and standalone BI that starts small and scales to other parts of the business. As a result, BI is going to become increasingly consumerized and accessible to small and mid-sized businesses.

BI vendors, like ourselves, also have to keep pace with the increasing size and scale of data in general. We believe that so-called “Big Data” will only start making sense when we can combine slow-changing, legacy data with the new, high-volume data. We have big plans for this element of data handling, but we’ll have to come back and tell you more about that later in the year…


Rhianna Collier is VP for the Software Division at SIIA.

 

Tip #1: 10 Tips to Maximizing Your Time at All About the Cloud

We are just 10 weeks out until the 7th All About the Cloud conference in San Francisco. Since I have actively participated, and some may say survived, the last 6 years of this event I thought it would be helpful to share some tips on how to get the most from your conference attendance. Each week I, along with some featured guests, will provide tips to help you organize your time at the conference and leverage all that the event has to offer. To kick us off…

Tip 1: Come prepared with your questions! Over the past 7 years, we have had a number of widely recognized and distinguished speakers cross our stage. 2012 is no different! This year you will hear keynote presentations that will help ISVs scale their cloud offerings and enhance their products with mobile technologies. We will also be joined by a Pulitzer Prize Finalist who will give us a look ahead into the next stage of cloud disruption. An additional 50 experts will take the stage over the course of two days to address your most compelling business issues, ultimately providing you with the advice you need to grow and monetize your business.

All of our speakers, keynotes included, are happy to take questions from the audience. Come prepared with your questions. If you don’t get the answer you were looking for from the presentations or discussions don’t be afraid to ask. Our speakers benefit from your questions just as much as you benefit from their answers.


Rhianna Collier is VP for the Software Division at SIIA.

 

Interview with new SIIA member Alteva

We are delighted to welcome Alteva, a WVT Communications Group, to the SIIA community. I had a chance to speak with their Executive VP and Chief Sales Officer, Louis Hayner to discuss the value of cloud-based unified communications. Read my interview below.

Rhianna: Welcome to SIIA! Tell me a little bit about Alteva.

Louis: Alteva, a WVT Communications Group company, is a cloud-based unified communications solution provider for companies with 35+ users. The highest priority at Alteva is providing every customer with all their communications needs including cloud-based Call Routing/Voice over IP Services (VoIP PBX), Messaging and Web-based Collaboration through Microsoft Communication Services, Fixed Mobile Convergence and Advanced Communications Applications for the desktop.

Rhianna: What are the advantages for companies to move their communication needs to the cloud?

Louis: There are many benefits for companies of all sizes to move to the cloud. The most advantageous include mobility/anywhere access; scalability; cost savings; and disaster recovery capabilities. Alteva’s hosted Unified Communications clients reduce their total cost of ownership by 20% with a 70% reduction in startup expenses and no ongoing maintenance fees, as compared to premise-based PBX systems.

Rhianna: You have partnerships with some of the leading technology companies. How important is the partner ecosystem? Do you have any advice for our members when it comes to building a successful partner program?

Louis: WVT Communications Group believes that a high tide raises all ships – something that Alteva has always held to. That’s why our philosophy has always been to seek co-marketing opportunities with not just partners, but even fellow cloud communications service providers. When any cloud communications company promotes hosted technology and educates the public about the benefits of the cloud, it serves the entire cloud industry. Alteva can tout its own solution as the best, but when its partners are touting Alteva it provides a much more credible and powerful third party validation. It’s important to have good relationships with your partners, and to have strategic discussions on ways to work together and help one another. If our partners names can help to validate our brand quality, then it is to their benefit to provide quotes for our press releases and put representatives in our trade show booths and attend our events.

Rhianna: Your customers cover a range of industries. Are certain industries more likely to adopt these cloud-based communication solutions? Are there any industries that have surprised you with their rate of adoption? Do you see any significant movement from the public sector?

Louis: Many industries can benefit from cloud communications, but there are some that can benefit even more so than others. For example, law firms benefit from the mobility features that enable user to communicate from any location, as well as hosted call recording and detailed phone reporting features. Law firms, health care facilities and other organizations that tend to have multiple locations or satellite offices will see notable cost savings. We are not surprised by any industries specifically, but we are thrilled by the increased adoption by the SMB space in recent years, as they see that solutions like Alteva Unified Communications are affordable for smaller companies.


Rhianna Collier is VP for the Software Division at SIIA.

 

SIIA All About the Cloud Video Preview

Check out this video preview of what’s to come at SIIA’s All About the Cloud 2012.


Katie CarlsonKatie Carlson is Program Manager for the SIIA Software Division.