Results for the tag, smaller company.

Find the latest news and information on smaller company from ComputerWeekly.com and the web.

All ResultsResults from Computer Weekly - SMALLER COMPANY

...RFID) because users know those giants will still be around. No-one wants to bet their RFID implementation on a smaller company whose fortunes may hit the buffers. It is perhaps no surprise then, that two of those larger companies, HP... http://www.computerweekly.com/blogs/RFID-blog/2007/11/remembering-that-rfid-is-still-1.html
...server if you have a clustered application. "Longer tenure could be based on service levels. For example, a smaller company that can do without e-mail for half a day would agree to a basic service level 1 but a bigger company, where e... http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2009/03/26/235421/hardware-as-a-service.htm
...was theirs and they seek ways of reducing my outlay.” Part of the problem with strategic relationships in a smaller company, where IT spending is limited, is maintaining the level of interaction with the suppliers.”You do not always have... http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2006/09/26/218603/how-to-build-a-strategic-relationship.htm
...employees with broadband connections, laptops and even office chairs to encourage employees to work from home. And at one smaller company, shortlisted in the category for businesses with fewer than 200 employees, every employee gets their birthday off... http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2009/02/03/234487/Shortlist-announced-for-Best-Places-to-Work-in-IT-2009.htm
...sometimes," Sundberg said. "The smaller company may not have all the benefits...company 17.9% Move to a smaller company 1.7% Continue in my...leading the IT department of a smaller company rather than working for a larger... http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2006/11/01/219574/smbs-better-to-be-a-big-fish-in-a-small-pond.htm
...usefully be called business resilience. And the smaller company would be well advised to devote some time to the subject...to a building may be prohibited, which would hit a smaller company hard. A big company may have alternative offices... http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2006/03/07/214521/smb-focus-the-power-of-now.htm
...enterprise. For example, if a virus hits an enterprise network, they have a team of guys to put out the fire. A smaller company may actually be put out of business. So NetApp [Network Appliance Inc.], EVault, EMC [Corp.] and all those... http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2006/08/30/218159/data-protection-should-rank-first-for-smbs.htm
...crime is just as happy to attack smaller companies as larger ones. MessageLabs is probably opportune to target the smaller company, though the ‘basic’ naming of its products implies a user naiveté that many smaller companies might take exception... http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2006/12/13/220637/MessageLabs-targets-smaller-customers.htm
...businesses. This is nowhere more apparent than in the use of mobile technology. Today it is entirely feasible for a smaller company to issue its sales force with instant mobile e-mail, using a Blackberry PDA or Microsoft smartphone. It is almost... http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2006/05/23/216017/It39s-time-to-get-equal.htm
...Live CEO Lenny Targon said, “Microsoft seems to think that it can do whatever it wants just because we are a much smaller company. It is shocking that Microsoft would have so little regard for another company's intellectual property rights that... http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2007/02/27/222081/Microsoft-sued-over-Office-Live-productivity-trademark.htm

All ResultsNews and blogs from the web - SMALLER COMPANY

...notion for a second and just ask real quick, has your cultural definition of evil changed as you've grown from a smaller company, focused almost exclusively on search, to a company that is doing so many different things right now? Eric Schmidt... http://news.cnet.com/8301-30966_3-10397482-262.html

All ResultsOther content from the web - SMALLER COMPANY

...dollars each year on manual penetration testing that covers only a small fraction of their web applications. Even a smaller company can easily spend $25,000 to $50,000 to test an average-sized web application a single time with no assured... http://www.findwhitepapers.com/whitepaper605/
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