Monday 24 November 2008

Eircom League looks to the future

Sunday Business Post - Business of Sport page - Nov 23 2008

See this article on the Sunday Business Post's website by clicking here.


Despite the downturn, the director of the League of Ireland believes that clubs are in a good position for the future, writes Dermot Corrigan.

Bohemians and Derry City take to the field at the RDS in Dublin today for the showpiece event of the Eircom League of Ireland calendar, the FAI Ford Cup final.


Bohemians enter the game as favourites, having easily secured the league title in an eventful season. In sporting terms, 2008 will be remembered as the year that Drogheda United almost toppled Dynamo Kiev in the Champions League, while Dundalk returned to the top division after securing promotion with the very last kick of the season. However, this year will also be remembered for less positive reasons.

Two clubs - last season’s champions Drogheda United and 2005 title winners Cork City - have gone into examinership in recent months, each with debts of about €750,000. More than half of the league’s clubs have been unable to pay their players in full or on time.


According to Fran Gavin, director of the League of Ireland, the problems faced by the clubs are not due to bad management, but are a very public example of how the downturn is affecting everyone in Irish society.


‘‘On the pitch, this has been a very good season,” said Gavin. ‘‘It has been one of the best ever years in Europe. Bohemians won the league in a record-breaking manner and the standard of play has been very high. ‘‘Off the pitch, it was not a good year for the league, but wage difficulties are not unique to the League of Ireland. Everybody running a business in Ireland today is seeing financial difficulties. Ours get highlighted on the back pages of newspapers, and the issues around Drogheda and Cork City have been well-documented.”

The ‘‘issues’’ have included Drogheda players threatening strike action after the club’s plan to sell its ground and move to a new €35 million, 10,000-seater stadium ran into planning difficulties. Cork’s problems arose after the club’s former owner - venture capital group Arkaga - withdrew its backing midway through the season.

Galway United was forced to sell key players in mid-season and imposed pay reductions on the players who remained.

Bohemians’ league win has also been overshadowed by a High Court case between the club and property developers over its relocation plans. Bohemian’s Dalymount Park site, in Phibsboro in Dublin, was valued at €60 million at the height of the property boom, but is now worth a lot less.

Gavin said that some clubs, like many other parts of Irish society, were over-reliant on the property and construction sectors. ‘‘The difficulties span not only the deals that were done with developers, but there were also sponsorship deals with developers and property companies,” he said.

‘‘Some clubs have then had difficulty receiving the sponsorship that was agreed. That was clearly due to the downturn in the economy, particularly in the building trade.”

However, many clubs faced difficulties even before the property bubble burst or the credit crunch hit. The 2005 Genesis Report stated that the league was ‘‘near to being economically bankrupt’’ and ‘‘unsustainable in its current format’’.

Gavin said that a lot had changed in the three years since that report. Two years ago, the FAI took over the running of the league from the member clubs. It has since imposed a licensing process, which includes a wage cap at 65 per cent of a club’s total income.

‘‘It was best practice last year, it is regulation this year,” said Gavin.

‘‘Clubs were paying 95 per cent of their income on players’ wages, which was the highest [percentage] in Europe. Now clubs that do not come under 65 per cent by the end of the season can be sanctioned. The sanctions can go as far as not receiving a licence for next year.”

Gavin said he was optimistic that all clubs would qualify for their 2009 league licences, despite the events of this year. ‘‘Everybody has learned a lot of lessons this year,” he said.

‘‘All 22 clubs have to go through the licensing procedure, and only when that is decided will we know the structure of the league. We will take it that the ten teams that qualified for the league next year will be there, unless we are told otherwise, and the fixtures will be set out accordingly.”

According to Gavin, the FAI is two years into a five-year plan to get the league onto a solid footing.

‘‘We are trying to make clubs more sustainable and community-based,” he said. ‘‘We will then have more credibility and attract more sponsors. It is a marathon, not a sprint, but we have changed the ethos of the league.”

Eliminating club debts had been a priority for the FAI, according to Gavin.

‘‘Last year, the total [debt] was €7 million. This year, that is projected for €3.5 million. Next year, the clubs will be debt-free. At the moment, money is being used by many clubs to service their old debt. If that is no longer needed, clubs can then invest in youth policies, facilities and in staff to make sure the club is run better.”

While Arkaga invested in Cork City as a business opportunity, Gavin did not think that Eircom league clubs were suited to being run for profit. ‘‘It is a difficult situation running a football club,” he said.

‘‘It is not something that you are going to get involved in to make a fortune. A break-even position for most clubs would be a successful season.”

Gavin cited links between Shamrock Rovers and South Dublin County Council as a more sustainable club ownership model. Rovers are due to take up residency in a new, local authority-funded stadium in Tallaght for the start of next season.

‘‘These relationships are like a public private partnership, where the county council recognises the social role played by the football club in communities,” he said.

‘‘There are similar partnerships in many Scandinavian countries.

‘‘There are several different setups within the league. St Patrick’s Athletic have a wealthy backer [property developer Garrett Kelleher] who sees a social responsibility to build up the club. Bohemians is a members-owned club. The most interesting one for us is the link between the club and the local authority.”

Gavin said that the FAI had shown its commitment to the domestic league by raising the prize money for winning the league to €250,000,up from€17,000 five years ago. The FAI Cup is worth another €100,000 to the victorious club.

‘‘Besides the prize money, we have also been working on issues like TV money, sponsorship and other commercial issues to try to help the clubs increase their revenue,” he said.

Another goal is to attract more people to games. Gavin said that attendances in 2007 were up 100,000 on the previous year, although the numbers going to games had levelled off in 2008.

‘‘For the last two years, premier league clubs have [had] a promotion officer working in schools and different parts of the local community, which we co-finance with the club,” he said.

‘‘Clubs that have these officers have seen their attendances increase, whereas clubs without them have not. Sligo Rovers are a fantastic example; their attendances are up 20 per cent this year.”

While Gavin said that it was inevitable that the best players would be attracted to play abroad, he said the priority was to ensure that Irish players were developed to the stage where they could be sold for a decent price.

In the past, players have been sold for small transfer fees - current Irish international Kevin Doyle was sold by Cork to Reading for €120,000 and three years later, is valued at more than €8 million. Cork last week sold their rights to 10 per cent of Doyle’s next transfer fee, to Reading for a sum thought to be in the region of €250,000.

‘‘We have invested heavily in getting our managers to have the UEFA pro licence, which is the top licence for managers in the world,” said Gavin. ‘‘That is reflected in their coaching abilities, and the players in the league have improved.

‘‘Players that are being looked at by English clubs are now a much better product, fitter and technically better, so you can command a higher fee for them."

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Friday 21 November 2008

Disappearing Act

When Saturday Comes - December 2008

In August, Irish champions Drogheda United came within inches of eliminating Dynamo Kiev from the Champions League. Midfielder Shane Robinson saw his injury-time cross-shot diverted on to a post by Kiev keeper Taras Lutsenko, before the ball agonisingly rolled across the goalline with no Drogheda player on hand to tap home. Minutes earlier Adam Hughes had somehow fired over an open goal from six yards.

The rattled Ukrainians held out to squeeze through 4-3, then hammer Spartak Moscow 8-2 on aggregate to seal their place in the group stages. Drogheda were left ruing what might have been.
The Drogheda players’ recent thoughts are likely to have been more prosaic, as they dwelled on issues such as how to pay their mortgages or put food on their family's table.

On October 9th they were told by club chairman Vincent Hoey that they would not be paid for the rest of the season. A week later the club went into receivership with reported debts of over €732,000 and were docked ten points. This deduction could be moot, as they may well disappear completely before the new season starts next spring.
Things were much different just 12 months ago.

A (relatively) expensively assembled team, managed by Eircom league legend Paul Doolin, cruised to Drogheda's first ever national league title. This came after two Setanta Sports Cups and an FAI Cup in the preceding two years. The glory times had arrived for a previously yo-yo, small-town club. This season saw them ease past Estonian champions FC Levadia Tallinn 3-1 on aggregate, before running Kiev so close.


Such achievements were possible because of the estimated €8 million that had been poured into the club since 2004, when Hoey and fellow directors Christopher Byrne and Eugene O'Connor rolled out their masterplan. They aimed to sell current ground United Park, which holds only 2,000 fans, and use the proceeds to fund a new €35m 10,000-seat stadium outside the town, while also developing residential units, offices and leisure facilities on the old site. The idea was initially hailed as visionary, and the board does appear to have the best interests of the club at heart, but planning issues have bedevilled the project and it remains on the drawing board. Meanwhile, their financial over-reach means that Drogheda's 27 players and 12 staff could well be out of a job by Christmas.


As this issue of WSC is still on sale, I'm not putting the whole article up on the site. Click here to purchase a copy of the magazine, or here to visit the WSC website.

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Monday 17 November 2008

Nowcasting International signs €300k Canadian deal

Sunday Business Post - Done Deal page - Nov 16 2008

See this article on the Sunday Business Post's website by
clicking here.

Irish company
Nowcasting International has signed a €300,000 deal with Canadian global energy giant Nexen to provide weather forecasting services.

Mark White, chief executive of Nowcasting International, said the three-year agreement would service Nexen operations in the North Sea.


‘‘We are providing them with high-resolution weather data, and detailed meteorological and oceanographic services,” he said. ‘‘Nexen has several producing and drilling assets in the North Sea that require accurate and detailed weather forecasting, to safely undertake operations and to maximise the use of its assets.


‘‘We do not just pump lots of weather information to it, we give it to Nexen using software installed on its computers, which are Irish-designed. This solution allows it to get answers to its questions and identify weather windows, taking into account wave heights, wind speed or current speed and direction.”


The deal was finalised following a competitive four-month tendering process, White said.

‘‘We have a senior sales executive based full-time in Aberdeen,” he said. ‘‘It was a relatively quick deal for us, but we had been introducing it to our technology over the last year.”


Nowcasting was established in 1999, with initial funding from Eircom Enterprise Fund, Shannon Development and Mayfair Venture Capital.

The company delivers weather information provided by partner companies to customers using its patented Nowcast Pro technology. Customers include ferry operators, navies, coastguards, offshore oil and gas operators, shipping companies and individual boat owners.

‘‘When we started out, we had to establish credibility, as we were up against people like Met Éireann and UK Met Office,” said White. ‘‘We did a deal with HM Customs and Excise in 2002 to switch from UK Met Office, which was a big breakthrough for us and helped us to get current customers like BT and Chevron.”

Nowcasting employs 16 staff at offices in Ennis and turned over €3million in 2007. White said an agreement signed in 2003 with US company Wilkens Weather Technologies had enabled it to offer a competitive service to oil and gas companies in the North Sea.

‘‘Together, we have established a North Sea weather centre in Aberdeen,” he said. ‘‘We have four forecasters there providing a 24-7 service, which gives us a very strong position to compete with the likes of UK Met Office for this kind of business.”

Nowcasting’s partnerships with international weather data suppliers enable it to service customers in the Gulf of Mexico, Brazil, the Mediterranean, west Africa and Russia, White said.

The company recently launched online consumer forecasting service Askmoby.com, which won the Silver Award for Most Innovative Business Model at the Mobile Search Awards 2008, held in London last month.

‘‘It allows users on mobile phones and PCs hour-by-hour weather forecast for anywhere in Europe for a particular activity,” said White. ‘‘They get a free forecast, and a very specific ad focused on the activity and weather they will get.”

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Monday 10 November 2008

Griffith College signs €3m Chinese deal

Sunday Business Post - Done Deal page - Nov 09 2008

See this article on the Sunday Business Post's website by
clicking here.

Griffith College in Dublin has agreed partnership deals valued at €3 million to accept students from four Chinese colleges.


Griffith college president Diarmuid Hegarty said the deals would boost college revenues with the addition of up to 300 new students annually.


As a result of the agreements with Huazhong University of Science and Technology (HUST),Yangtze University, Hebei College of Finance (HCF) and Beijing International Studies University (BISTU), Hegarty said the students would take part in business and IT degree programmes run by Griffith College.


‘‘We expect to get 300 more students coming here out of the new arrangements,” he said. ‘‘With an average of €10,000 per student, we get the €3 million figure.”



Under the arrangement with HCF, Griffith will establish a new Association of Chartered Certified Accountant s (ACCA) teaching department. For BISTU, it will develop a special international degree in accounting and finance.

Chinese students from all four institutions will be able to use their studies at Griffith College towards their final degree qualifications at home, Hegarty said.

‘‘The Chinese universities will amend their programmes so students can effectively cover there what our degrees cover in the first two years,” he said.

‘‘Typically, students do two years in China and then one or two years here in Ireland.” Hegarty valued the new agreements at €6 million annually to the wider Irish economy.

‘‘Each student probably spends €10,000 while living here, on travel, accommodation and subsistence,” he said.

Griffith College already has articulation agreements in place with three other universities in Beijing and Shanghai, plus an office in Beijing employing three staff locally.

Prior to this latest deal, 500 Chinese students attended Griffith courses in Ireland each year, generating €5 million in revenues for the college, Hegarty said.

He said the college had worked hard since 1994 to build relationships with institutions and individuals around China. ‘‘We are now the best known Irish education institution in China,” he said.

‘‘It is all about developing personal relationships and staying in constant contact. You do not develop these contacts overnight, you go over there and meet with them and work with them to gain their trust.”

Five hundred accountancy students attend a Russian college established by Griffith in Moscow in 2002. It also has more than 140 collaboration agreements with colleges in the US, Europe and Asia.

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Monday 3 November 2008

Website investment is shrewd marketing

Sunday Business Post - Computers in Business Magazine - November 2 2008

See this article on the Sunday Business Post's website by clicking here.


As the public tighten their belts, surfing online when considering a purchase will become more popular, so companies should ensure they have an attractive website, writes Dermot Corrigan.


Hard times are upon us, according to the experts. Even if they aren't, the perception is such that they may as well be. This means that customers are going to start looking to reduce costs. And many of them will start to spend more time online, given its association with cut-price products and services.


So the smart company preparing for an extended downturn should think of investing in a proper website now.

"When people are looking for cheaper products or services, whether it is airline flights or lawnmowers, they are going to go online," said Martin Casey, managing director of web design and internet consultancy firm Arekibo.


"When things are tighter and they have less money in their pockets, they are going to start looking more and more online to get the best deal."

Casey said that nowadays most customers look to the internet first when considering any kind of purchase, therefore companies should ensure they present the best possible online image.


"The internet has become the de facto reference point for people to find services," he said. "Everyone is going to Google or Yahoo. The website is your virtual front door, it gives the customer an insight into who you are, what you do, and how you treat people. It is vital in times like these that your internet is very much at the front of what you are trying to achieve with your business."

Developing a website as an alternative sales channel should be a key objective for many businesses faced with challenging markets, according to Casey.


"A website is not more important than having more sales people, because the internet site is a channel for introducing customers to your team," he said.
"But it has to be part and parcel of supporting your organisation to sell your services. If you have fewer people to do the selling, then the internet site is there to support that."

Michele Neylon, managing director of hosting services provider Blacknight Solutions, said that not all Irish businesses, of all shapes and sizes, had yet realised the importance of their web presence to their business.


"There are still a lot of Irish businesses who have not yet fully understood what the internet is, and what they can do with it," said Neylon. "We get people contacting us who still do not understand the difference between an e-mail address and a domain name. The general level of knowledge has improved, but there is still a surprising level of misunderstanding.


"It is not just small businesses; for example, it is still impossible for customers to e-mail their local AIB branch, as the AIB branch network does not have access to e-mail. Within that environment it is hard to expect small businesses to get a handle on all the possibilities of ecommerce."

Maryrose Lyons, managing director of Brightspark Consulting, said that, while some very bad websites still existed, most Irish companies now had reasonably well-designed and well-thought out sites.


"I am happy to say that most Irish company websites have improved over the last half decade,’' said Lyons. "I run a web writing training course and part of the preparation for that is to find examples of what not to do. "And I have to say it's getting harder and harder to find some real whammies. That said, there are some shocking sites out there - many from larger companies that ought to know better. I can not understand how some businesses that understand the importance of design in their own products can allow themselves to be portrayed online with this kind of thing you sometimes see."


Fiachra O'Marcaigh, director of online consultancy Amas, said that smaller organisations often had better websites than larger competitors. "Smaller companies are often more innovative and more energetic in their use of online channels than larger ones," said O'Marcaigh. "Most companies now recognise that a good website is not a luxury, it's an absolute necessity."


What makes a good site


O'Marcaigh said that companies should think carefully about what exactly they wanted their website to do for them. "Clear thinking about what your messages or selling points are is vital," he said. "Without this, you simply cannot create an effective site. Once you know your own goals and messages clearly, focus on your users and what they want, need and know. Design your site for your users, not for yourself or your peers."

Companies should consider what business objectives they want their website to meet, according to Gary Cosgrave, sales director with Webtrade. "The most important thing for a website is to lead the searcher to a completed action in the shortest time possible," he said.

"That completed action depends on what your business type is, or what your business model is. It might be to get the customer to the piece of furniture that they want to buy as quickly as possible and purchase it online. "You have to make sure that the user interface design and the information architecture are structured in a certain way that people get what they want, what you want, and so that they do not get lost on the site."

Casey advised businesses to work out criteria for measuring a site's success "We want to set an understanding of how they are going to measure success from the start," he said. "When we are planning the site that is very important. Is it more queries or people calling you, more sales online, is it helping you to represent your organisation better? These are things that help the client understand and measure what their investment means."

Content

Lyons said that businesses should not try to use their websites to just store as much content and sales material as possible.

"Most businesses have an abundance of content lying around in sales material, proposals, strategic plans, product specs and the like," she said. "The trick here is not to simply dump all of this information on to your website. We read 25 per cent less off a computer screen, so write 50 per cent less. Be ruthless about culling your content. Rewrite it in a web friendly way. Use bullets instead of paragraphs. Use short sentences and no jargon." Different companies will want to promote different aspects of their business, and hence use different types of content, according to O ¨ Marcaigh.

"The kind of content that an SME publishes should be valuable to its online audiences and support the goals of the business, as set out in its online strategy," he said. "This will vary widely, from one business to another. For example, a bicycle shop may sponsor local races and post news and results to its website. A legal firm might publish a newsletter of legal news from the areas of law that it specialises in."

Fergal O'Byrne, chief executive of the Irish Internet Association, said that all business websites should be regularly updated. "Updating content on a website is key to keeping it fresh and interesting," he said. "It also ensures that users have confidence that the company behind the site is still in business! How many times have you been turned off a site because the last news item was two years old? Search engines also reward content that is updated regularly.

Search engine optimisation

Ensuring that your site is ranked high in Google or other search engine searches is a key consideration for all business websites, according to O'Byrne.

"Ideally, search engine optimisation (SEO) should be considered when the site is being designed," he said. "Most of the good web design companies build sites that are search engine friendly and stand the best chance of being found in the main search engines (Google, Yahoo, MSN). SEO is an on-going process and companies need to constantly check where they are showing in the search engines and for what search terms."

Lyons outlined a number of SEO strategies. "Search engine optimisation has always been a bit of a black art," she said. "With the advent of Google, it has evolved to become a very specialised and technical part of the industry. The days of sticking a few keywords into your metadata are long over.

"Today's number one rankings are more a result of detailed keyword and competitive analysis, followed by labour-intensive, time-consuming link building activity. As a result, search engine optimisation is not cheap. For certain competitive keywords, you can almost expect to spend the same amount on optimising the site as you spent on building it."

E-commerce

E-commerce options and functionality figure prominently in many web strategies, O ¨ Marcaigh said. "Not every company needs e-commerce, but they certainly need to consider it carefully," he said.

"Consumers and businesses in a business to business context value the convenience of sourcing goods and services online. Increasingly, they want to be able to transact and buy online also. "Provided that the business is possible to carry out online, then companies should look carefully at the benefits, such as greater reach, lower cost of sales and other, as well as the downsides: set-up cost, fraud risk and the need to manage the channel." Lyons said there were various e-commerce systems available to suit the requirements of the company.

"If your business is involved in selling product and you are considering developing an e-commerce website, you can begin by offering payment with Paypal," she said. "This is the lowest fee level, good for very small businesses where brand is not an issue. If you are already a retailer and have credit card processing facilities then you can go for manual processing of transactions. "If you are really serious about e-commerce and are getting the volumes, then automatic card processing is a must. I recommend Realex because their systems are robust and the team there is super helpful and easy to deal with." O'Byrne said that some companies do not need an e-commerce element to their site.

"A company must establish whether the investment in an online booking or payments system will make a return on their investment," he said. "For example for a small B&B it may not be prudent to spend their budget on a real-time booking system. A simple availability calendar might be more useful and the remaining budget could be spent on an online marketing campaign via a service like Google Adwords, for example." However, that did not mean the website should be not be designed to encourage the browser in a particular direction, Cosgrave said.

"Some companies do not need a transactional element, so we can just make sure that it is an information rich, brochure type site," he said. "With that kind of site we are trying to lead the searcher to complete the contact us form to make direct contact with the customer, rather than actually making a purchase."

Bells and whistles

Recent years have seen increased interest in so-called Web 2.0 or interactive website features, such as blogs, forums, podcasts, really simple syndication (RSS), regular newsletters, etc, all of which allow businesses to communicate directly with their customers. However, Lyons advised businesses against adding too many unfocused bells and whistles to their sites.

"Only introduce elements that your target audience will use," she said. "If you are marketing to a youth audience for example, it's likely they will all have iPods, so a podcast might be a better way to get your message across than an e-mail newsletter. "However, e-mail newsletters remain one of the most effective ways to communicate with a business audience. Blogs are also great and as more people are using RSS, this will continue to be so. The ideal is to have a blog and then repackage the popular posts as the content for your newsletter. You can use Google Maps instead of a picture of the building.

"Use functionality that will make the visitor's experience easier and richer, not functionality that has no purpose - like those awful ‘skip intro' pages." O'Byrne said that smaller companies could use innovative websites to compete in larger global markets. "One of the best SME examples of embracing all these elements is worldwidecycles.com," he said.

"This Clonmel based specialist cycling shop allows potential customers from al l around the world to take a Virtual Tour of the physical shop via an embedded YouTube video, promotes an active blog, and utilises the photo sharing facility, Flickr. The end result is a sense of engagement and interactivity for the potential customer and returning client alike." Lyons said that the next few years would see even smaller websites evolving their websites to incorporate less text and more multimedia.

"We are seeing an increase in video content across many industries," she said. "If you need to communicate a message with an audience who are used to using websites and are perhaps a little tired of being presented with large amounts of text, then a short video can carrying your key messages can be more effective. "There will be a move away from the large 50-100 page sites that were driven by content management systems, back to short, punchy five or ten page sites using a mix of video, text and imagery to convey a message. Kanchi.org is a good example of that."

Nuts and bolts

O'Byrne said that most Irish companies now managed the day to day updating and maintenance of their website using simple content management systems (CMS).

"ACMS is an easy to use tool that allows a nontechnical user to update content, often text on the pages of a site and other elements like photos or pictures," he said. "In most cases it does not allow the user to break the site or interfere with the design template, which is a good thing." Gary Cosgrave, sales director of Webtrade, said that web design companies generally trained their customers on how to update their own sites using customised CMSs.

"Our CMS is designed specifically for the non technical users, and we train people to use it," he said. "It means you are not reliant either on internal technical staff or external consultants.

"You log in using your username and password, and you are actually editing what you see on the website. You click on a navigational button to add a page, edit a page et cetera. You get into a WYSIWYG (what you see is what you get) or text editor, which is pretty much the same as Word. If you can use Word, you can use the CMS." Often the updating of a company's website is not done by an IT expert, Casey said. "The fundamental change that has happened over the last few years is that marketing people have begun to look after the websites," he said.

"These people do not have time to be sent on a course to learn HTML. We would have a client trained up in two to three hours maximum, and they would be able to manage every aspect of the website, add pages, extra products, news and events et cetera." Neylon said that companies could benefit from analytics tools that let them see exactly how visitors are interacting with the website, including which pages and elements of the site were most popular.

"You can see which pages of your website people have visited, which elements within those pages that they have clicked on, where they spent more time," he said. "You can really see which things are working well and which things are not."

Hosting

Most Irish companies now outsource the hosting of their websites, according to Neylon. "Only very big companies would host their website in house," he said.

"Realistically speaking to do your own hosting, you need technical expertise and the infrastructure in place with a server connected to the internet 24 hours a day, seven days a week.You need stable internet connections, backups et cetera, it is not something that most small businesses are going to deal with." While Irish sites can be hosted on servers anywhere in the world, O'Byrne advised Irish companies to deal with local hosting companies.

"We always advise companies doing business in Ireland to host their websites here," he said.’ ‘It is reassuring to know that there is a physical presence behind the hosting company, that is contactable during your normal office hours." Hosting costs have fallen dramatically in recent years, according to Neylon. "The price has been pushed down on the hosting packages, and the services are being increased all the time," he said. "For €50 a year you can get a huge amount of disk space and oodles of everything else."

Whether to go for a dot.ie or dotcom web address can be a poser for companies, O ¨ Marcaigh said. "If possible, companies should register both and then decide which domain to focus on for marketing themselves," he said. "To generalise, the .com domain presents a more international air, while .ie is clearly Irish-oriented.

"For a company focused in the first place on the home market, using .ie puts them closer to their Irish customers. That helps to establish trust more readily. They should also consider registering the .co.uk domain name and look at any other markets that may be relevant to them in the future." Neylon said that his customers chose a mixture of .ie and .com addresses, however .ie addresses, only available from the IEDR (.ie Domain Registry), were sometimes more difficult to register and set up.

"You can register and get a .com or .co.uk up and running in about half an hour if the name is available," he said. "To get a .ie you have to be a registered business, or a limited company with a business name the same or close to the domain you want to register, or you have to contact them and persuade them to allow you to have the name."

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Get more fibre in business diet

Sunday Business Post - Computers in Business Magazine - November 2 2008

See this article on the Sunday Business Post's website by clicking here.


Fibre-optic cables will allow new speeds for internet access for business, writes Dermot Corrigan.


Most Irish businesses access the internet using a mix of traditional copper wires and more recent fibre-optic technology. Generally, there is a copper link from the business premises to the closest point on national or private underground fibre networks. That is the basis for the majority of high-speed broadband packages offered by the various vendors.


However, more and more companies are looking to get fibre to the premises (FTTP) links, which involve no copper and link the company directly into the national or private fibre system. This is because fibre is just downright better than copper for meeting a modern company's high-speed communications requirements, according to John Quinn, regulatory and development director with Smart Telecom.


"Fibre is simply the best medium to provide telecommunications services," said Quinn. "It offers practically unlimited capacity, very high security, symmetrical speeds and excellent quality of service. It does cost more than traditional copper-based services, but it is a matter of balancing quality and cost to the business need. Not all businesses need fibre, but for those that do, it is a value-for-money investment."

Liam Collins, head of products, enterprise and government market at Eircom, said that once a customer was looking for over 10MB download speeds, fibre was generally the answer.


"Whether you choose copper or fibre really depends on the amount of bandwidth you require, either for normal network services or for access to the internet,’' Collins said. "Generally speaking, if you require speeds of10MB or above, you would go for fibre. It just comes down to speed. Most customers would be using a variety of applications on their Wan [wide area network] such as e-mail applications, customer relationship management software or enterprise software like SAP or Oracle, a whole host of things.


"They would also probably be looking to connect their Lan [local area network] in Dublin to their Lan in Cork, for instance. If they need a high-speed connection, they would go for a fibre-based product."

Seamus Walsh, managing director wholesale for BT in Ireland, said that larger offices typically now required fibre-connectivity, just so their staff could go about their daily business. "The more people you have in an office building using the internet, the more demand there is on the connection," said Walsh. "If you have a building full of people who need to connect to the internet you eat up the capacity very quickly. The more commerce that is driven onto the internet, the more connection you need.


"As software systems develop they become more bandwidth hungry, it is just the natural progression of things. People get used to faster bandwidth speeds. Instead of being happy just to send an e-mail, they now expect to be able to watch YouTube and other videos pretty much instantaneously."

Collins said that smaller companies with a specific business need for high-speed internet access were also investing in fibre links.

"There is a change in the marketplace,’' Collins said.
"Two years ago, it was only larger companies that were investing in fibre, but now we are finding that SMEs are finding that their bandwidth requirements are increasing dramatically, so we are now installing fibre-based products in companies that would have surprised me a few years ago."

This was being driven by reductions in the cost of fibre products, according to Collins.

"The price has already come down from the first fibre products we launched five or six years ago," he said. "The product that gives ethernet and IP network access to customers is now a fraction of the price that it was. That will continue to happen."


Getting the fibre in


Quinn said that the costs involved in companies connecting directly to national or private fibre networks varied depending on individual circumstances. "It very much depends on how close the company in question is to a fibre-optic network," he said. "Fibre itself is not that expensive and neither is the equipment needed. What tends to be expensive is the cost of digging the road from the company in question to the closest fibre network. For some companies, this makes the installation costs prohibitive." Geographical location was a major factor in determining the price of getting the fibre in, according to Quinn.

"The Mans [metropolitan area networks – public-owned fibre systems which can be used by private operators] go some way to helping here, as do private networks such as the T-50 in Dublin, which is owned by Smart," he said. "In most population centres, such as Dublin, Cork and Galway, it is relatively easy to get a fibre connection, in particular in business and commercial centres. There are 27 other towns that currently have a government Man."

Collins said that most companies in urban centres were relatively close to the existing public fibre network. "If they are in a major city, there is a reasonable chance they will be in striking distance of fibre," he said. "We can do a survey to see how costly it will be to get access to the fibre network. Usually, they will be within a few hundred metres, or maybe a kilometre, of the existing fibre network. Sometimes, however, there will be more distance, which might involve digging a trench to link them in."

Walsh said that street cabinets on city and town streets contained access points to the national fibre network. "We would bring fibre to the cabinet and then copper to the customer's premises," he said. "The fibre would go from one of our core sites or data centres out to the customer, and we would interconnect it back out to the other side." The majority of the cost involved in a fibre implementation was bound up in digging up the ground to lay the cable, Walsh said.

"The greatest cost is the actual physical digging of the trench to carry the cable into the customer," he said. "In most cases, the re striction is the length of dig required. Nowadays, if we are going to dig into the customer, we would always deliver fibre, as they would probably already have a copper connection in already." Collins said that the costs of installing the fibre therefore varied greatly from site to site.

"It is difficult to talk about costs, as they vary so much," he said. "But you could start at €8,000 for an install of fibre access. Once you get the fibre access in, the services can be layered on top of that very cost effectively. So, while the first cost might seem pricey, you can add further services and bandwidth extremely cost-effectively." Mark Kellett, chief executive of Magnet Networks, said that many new developments installed fibre connections during the build.

"The majority of businesses Magnet runs fibre to would be new developments such as mixed-use with residential, retail and commercial space, or large commercial buildings with a number of tenants,’' said Kellett. "It makes economic sense that, when the construction is under way, it is the cheapest time to lay the fibre, before the roads are even built." Many new business parks or industrial areas in towns are being developed with fibre-connectivity in place, according to Kellett.

"There are a number of business parks openly touting their high-speed internet capability to attract tenants, they are even advertising on the radio," he said. "A high proportion of new large business parks being built around the country would have fibre access. It is not unique to Dublin." Quinn said that easier access to fibre-connectivity was in store for companies in smaller towns around Ireland. "The Mans will be available to a further 66 towns from around the end of this year."

Unblocking the systems

Quinn said that companies investing in fibre links should not be worried that a new faster technology would displace it in the short or medium term. "Wireless has natural spectrum limitations, particularly in terms of capacity," he said. "Copper suffers badly from interference and speeds are directly related to distance. Fibre, however, is virtually limitless and can send information over vast distances as it is immune to most forms of natural interference." Kellett said that fibre connections were easily scalable, so companies could ramp up their bandwidth as required.

"If your business grows and grows and you have a huge volume of data going across the network, you do not have to worry about the piece of copper reaching its maximum, and having to get more and more lines into your building," he said. "The one fibre link will allow you to grow and grow." Col lins said that call costs did not increase quite as rapidly. "The cost increases are not as big as you increase bandwidth," he said. "It is almost like a discount scheme, a 10MB is not five times the cost of a 2MB scheme. It might be twice the cost, but you have five times the bandwidth."

Fibre's ability to deliver symmetric, uncontended (not shared) connectivity was another advantage, Collins said. "The fibre service is symmetric, so you can have the same download and upload speeds," he said. "That is especially useful for customers who have applications where they want to upload large amounts of information to the net."

Kellett said that fibre allowed providers to offer extra services, alongside high-speed broadband. "Providers are starting to offer a large diverse range of services, things like voice over IP [VoIP], virtual call centres, virtual PBXs [telephony systems], managed IT support services. With the kind of speeds we are talking about, you can do a lot more." Collins said that not everyone needed to rush out to invest in fibre connectivity, as copper would continue to meet the requirements of many smaller firms going forward. "Copper provides quite cheap access for people who require lower bandwidth services," he said. "It would depend on the size of the customer's site, but fibre will not completely replace copper."

Walsh said that the technology underpinning copper connections was also improving. "With advances in DSL technology that sits on the copper, you are actually beginning to be able to deliver higher bandwidth over the copper infrastucture," he said. "Very high bit-rate DSL [VDSL] can deliver 24MB to a customer and, for many people, that is quite a significant amount of bandwidth. They would also be able to put VoIP onto that line as well. You would have a data and voice connection to the internet on copper. Five or six years ago, you would have needed fibre for that service, but now it can be delivered through copper." Kellett said that more widespread fibre networks would be required in Ireland as demand for highspeed internet access expanded in the future.

"It is something that will last us 20 to 25 years," he said."Copper is not going to last us, and fibre is the future. BT is doing a major investment in fibre, in Britain, and Telefonica is doing a major rollout in Madrid. It is recognised now by the leading European telcos as mission-critical. They realise that in order to offer new and diverse services they need to be rolling out fibre." Quinn said the Irish government was currently looking at how to expand the public fibre network, which could then be used by private operators to offer fibre-based services, and would make fibre available to more locations around the country.

"The government can encourage all parties to look at such investments with many of the items outlined in minister Eamon Ryan's NGN [next generation networking] consultation," he said. "By making ducting available to operators [one example, there are many others] and mandating that new developments have adequate and correct duct infrastructure installed on a neutral basis, the government will make the business case for FTTP more attractive. The new Mans will also assist in bringing more fibre services to more businesses in Ireland."

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