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The Smart Techie was renamed Siliconindia India Edition starting Feb 2012 to continue the nearly two decade track record of excellence of our US edition.

Small is Beautiful

Alok Mittal
Wednesday, September 30, 2009
Alok Mittal
For years, enterprise buyers have driven technology venture markets. The mantra for success was to create a product or service offering for the Fortune 500 customers – understandably so, since large customers are amenable to efficient sales processes, higher ticket size, and control most of the technology spending. Not anymore. Technology purchasing power is now shifting to smaller customers, and that represents the wave of innovation that we are likely to see over the next many years.

The notion of serving small customers is not new – Web hosting and pay roll outsourcing companies are examples of relatively standardized services that have been offered for some time now. However, the broader range of technology and service offerings has been out of reach for most of these customers. Very often, businesses providing such services are fragmented and locally driven, hence unable to create venture-style returns in most categories.

Small customers have their advantages – they offer significant diversification to revenue, and offer more pricing control than the larger ones. They have also been conventionally underserved. Furthermore, the globalization of buyer base has accentuated the need for such offerings. The key challenge has been lack of a relevant business model – how does one architect the offerings that can be customized for small businesses or even for individual consumers, and how does one take them to the market efficiently. Innovations in business models are enabling these markets across the spectrum, and Canaan is looking to participate in these opportunities.

On the core technology end of the spectrum, hosted software and cloud computing are areas that represent this trend. The computing infrastructure of the world is getting redesigned to provide more flexibility to customers. Small businesses can now get access to world-class infrastructure and software, and can dynamically scale their capacity, rather than having to incur huge capital investments. Provisioning of such infrastructure requires significant technology development; and some of the companies such as Success Factors, Soasta, and Virsto are helping create that future.

At the other extreme, services are also being reconfigured to suit the requirements of smaller businesses and individual consumers. Often delivered through a global workforce, these services are becoming more and more platform driven, and provide configurability not very dissimilar from that provided by hosted software. An example on the business side is our investment in UnitedLex, which is bringing the benefits of high end legal consulting and outsourcing to smaller clients. On the consumer front, iYogi aims to provide top end computer support to millions of consumers through a personalization platform.


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