Achieving More With Less – 4 Value-Adding Tech Solutions You Should Consider in 2023
With the current economic climate placing great strain on businesses across all sectors it’s more important than ever that your IT investments represent a profit-boosting investment rather than a financial burden. Thankfully, today’s innovative digital solutions make it easier than ever to untap your business’s productivity potential with platforms and services that can be scaled to align with the ever-evolving demands of your organisation.
Previously, we examined some of the qualities common to the most cost-competitive tech solutions. Now, let’s explore 4 solutions that, in our opinion, offer the most compelling cost/benefit payoff.
Cloud-Hosting
In the past, running a business IT service such as an email service, website or enterprise software programme, meant acquiring the necessary server hardware and housing and maintaining the setup in your office. Thanks to the cloud, such computing resources can now be acquired without the hassle, setup costs and inconvenience traditional IT projects could often entail. Cloud-hosting can offer numerous benefits compared to on-premise hosting, these include:
- Scalability. With cloud-hosting compute resources such as bandwidth, RAM and storage can be easily added or subtracted in line with the changing demands of a website or application – you only pay for what you need. In a traditional setup, performance and capacity is limited by the spec of the equipment being used.
- Enhanced reliability. Applications and services are hosted in ‘multi server’ environments. This avoids having a single-point-of-failure which can lead to service downtime with a traditional setup. Should one server fail, the rest of the server network will take over ensuring seamless service continuity.
- Cost-efficiency. We’ve already mentioned that cloud-hosting offers the ability to scale resource provision to closely match demand, but the potential for cost savings goes much deeper than that. Cloud data centres often thousands of tenant applications, allowing hardware costs, heating/cooling provision, physical and cyber security measures and ongoing maintenance costs to be distributed among the many organisations using the site. The result: hosting that’s far more cost-efficient (in most cases) than an on-premise setup.
Microsoft 365
Microsoft 365 was released in 2011 as the cloud-focussed evolution of Microsoft’s perennial ‘Office’ suite. Microsoft 365 features the familiar Office applications such as Excel, Word and PowerPoint, and supplements them with a range of ground-breaking and innovative platforms designed to equip remote workforces and improve workplace productivity.
With over 300 million users worldwide, Microsoft 365 has helped millions of business modernise their operations and remain effective throughout the pandemic. Here’s a quick rundown of the suite’s core platforms:
Teams
Featuring an intuitive messaging interface, class-leading video-conferencing, live document co-authoring and integrations with hundreds of third party apps and services, Teams is a true all-in-one collaboration platform that’s suitable for remote and office-based teams alike.
SharePoint
SharePoint allows users to create sites that can act as focal points for group projects or virtual noticeboards for business departments. Useful for consolidating project-relevant news, data and documents in a single location that can be easily accessed by all contributors.
Outlook
With over half a billion users worldwide, Microsoft’s Outlook email service is a staple of office life across the globe and forms an integral part of the Microsoft 365 user experience. Loaded with features that streamline email handling and featuring deep integration with the rest of Microsoft 365 it’s easy to understand why Outlook is the second most popular business email service out there.
Microsoft 365 is the archetypal SaaS (software-as-a-service) offering, with numerous packages available at varying price-points charged on a per-user basis. This makes it easy to tailor the subscription in-line with the changing needs of your business.
Cloud-Hosted VoIP
With the UK’s copper-based telephony infrastructure (and the products it supports) set to be fully shut down by the end of 2025, many organisations have already made the switch to a futureproof, IP-based phone system. Cloud-hosted VoIP is a future-ready alternative to the phone systems of old, offering scalability, flexibility and value unmatched by traditional telephony products.
Thanks to the mobility afforded by the cloud, Cloud-hosted VoIP systems can be accessed from any location provided a stable internet connection is available, allowing a single contact number to be leveraged for all employees regardless of location. There are also minimal hardware considerations: no need to set up a private branch exchange server or install new phone lines, and you can even access the phone system on existing internet-capable devices.
Modern VoIP phone systems come laden with a wealth of call-handling features as standard. Expect the likes of call queues, auto attendants, voicemail to email and countless other capabilities designed to make light work of call management. Many systems also enable the integration of multiple communication channels into their interface - a concept known as ‘unified communications’ – resulting in a more ergonomic and convenient end user experience.
You might think such convenience would come at a cost, but hosted VoIP actually compares favourably with traditional telephony products thanks to flexible subscription-based pricing and competitive call bundles that offer vast savings – particularly when calling abroad.
Managed Security Services
Establishing the security infrastructure and instituting the information security policies necessary to safeguard data can be a time-intensive business, which when combined with the daily pressures of running a business can leave little time for activities which aid business development. Seeking the support of a managed security service provider can alleviate the administrative burden of cyber security, and give you time to focus on activities that add value to your business.
A managed security provider can scan your network for vulnerabilities, establish defences to protect against malicious intrusion and monitor your environment 24/7 for emergent threats. They’ll also be able to develop and deploy a comprehensive data backup and continuity strategy designed to help your business recover disruptive events. Doing all of the above in-house is of course possible, but for small to medium sized organisations with limited IT budgets outsourcing IT security functions typically makes far greater commercial sense.
Clearwave – Technology Simplified
As organisations grow and evolve, it’s not uncommon for business objectives and IT to drift apart. When this is allowed to continue it can result in poor-performing, insecure and awkward business technology that inhibits your growth and frustrates employees and customers alike. Reconfiguring your IT to better support your aims and aspirations and work in harmony with your business processes is what’s required, but we know that doing so can seem an insurmountable challenge without the proper support.
Clearwave’s time-tested technology assessment process will help you identify where your IT is at odds with your business’s goals. We’ll survey your network to determine what works and where there’s room for improvement, and provide recommended actions to help bring your network up to the required standard. We offer a full-suite of managed IT services centred around our Total Affinity product line: a unique set of IT tools covering all bases, from highspeed business internet and cost-effective VoIP telephony to versatile cloud-based desktops and our all-in-one business management platform ‘Integra.’










