Two new Advisory Papers for enterprise technology selection teams
Added By Tony Byrne at 1-Mar-2010 | Twitter: @TonyByrne |
My colleague Alan Pelz-Sharpe has produced two short briefings of special interest to content technology selection teams.
The first one, "Using RFIs in the Procurement Process, explains potential benefits (including, yes, time savings) of employing Requests for Information as a preliminary step in your technology selection process. To quote:
-
With most prospective technology buyers, great effort is normally expended on an RFP process at the cost of the RFI. In fact, there often is no RFI, which is backward thinking; the purpose of an RFI is to gather information so that you can make better decisions. It is also a key tool for early elimination of those suppliers that cannot or should not be working with you.
The second paper, "Making Sense of Software Licensing," coaches you how to obtain the best deal, especially from larger, platform vendors. To quote:
-
We have seen up to 90 percent reductions in
actual pricing versus list prices. Although these extremes are uncommon, 25–50 percent
reductions are not unusual.
Our research subscribers can comment or ask questions directly on the page after logging in. Look forward to hearing from you.
Next steps: Get a free research sample or purchase complete vendor evaluations to obtain immediate access.
Categories: Tony Byrne, Collaboration & Community Software, Component Content Management, Digital Asset Management, E-mail Archiving and Management, Portals and Content Integration, Search and Information Access, Web Content Management, Building Business Case, Implementation, Industry Standards, Selecting Technology

