How many different billing vendors were on display at Wispapalloza?

From: Simon Westlake 
Sent: Tuesday, October 17, 2017 4:55 PM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Sonar

It makes a big difference when it doesn't run on a server, but a cluster of 
auto-scaling VMs. I would agree that in a simple deployment methodology, it 
becomes fairly irrelevant, but if you are running across something like Azure 
or AWS, it is far from a one to one mapping to just drop it on someone's server.


On 10/17/2017 5:43 PM, Mike Hammett wrote:

  I think the point is that if it runs on your server or runs on my server 
doesn't make much difference from the software management perspective, but it 
plays a big part of business continuity. I'd imagine most people on a MRC-based 
billing\OSS platform would migrate to a new one, but doing it over a few months 
because you can vs. tomorrow because you have to makes a big difference.




  -----
  Mike Hammett
  Intelligent Computing Solutions

  Midwest Internet Exchange

  The Brothers WISP






------------------------------------------------------------------------------

  From: "Simon Westlake" mailto:[email protected]
  To: [email protected]
  Sent: Tuesday, October 17, 2017 5:39:43 PM
  Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Sonar

  And I would be amazed if a major vendor went out of business in this industry 
and all the competitors didn't scramble to build tools to create a seamless 
transition. We already have one click tools for most of our competitors to 
import their data into Sonar, and we're working on the rest. The challenging 
thing is that a lot of systems don't enforce good data consistency, so there is 
junk to clean up. But if push comes to shove and you're willing to clean up 
what you got, it can be done very quickly.

  I think you also have to weigh up these worst case scenarios against reality. 
There has yet to be a billing vendor in this industry that has stopped 
operating in the 7 years I've been part of it, let alone close up shop in a 24 
hour period and leave everyone in the cold. Is it worth using old software that 
doesn't have the features you need because it offers some modicum of protection 
against an unlikely event? That is up to you to balance, but these doomsday 
scenarios are pretty unlikely, and if it's costing you a lot of efficiency and 
potential revenue, then my personal feeling would be that it doesn't outweigh 
the consequences. But everyone has to make their own risk assessment.

  I think you will just see acquisitions occur if a vendor gets to the point 
that they are struggling to operate. It would be silly for them to just 
disappear into the night.


  On 10/17/2017 4:15 PM, [email protected] wrote:

    Been through this many times in my life.  Done it both ways.  Several 
times.  
    Prefer the new vendor to do onboarding for me.  
    You get what you pay for.  

    From: Nathan Anderson 
    Sent: Tuesday, October 17, 2017 3:11 PM
    To: [email protected] 
    Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Sonar

    Not true.  It doesn't matter what the file format of the export is: you 
still have to take the time to figure out how to shoehorn data from one schema 
into another.  As talked about earlier, maybe you'll get support from your new 
vendor with that, maybe not.  There will be mistakes made during that process, 
and some of it will have to be re-done.  You also have to hook the new product 
into all of your authentication systems and then test that to make sure it 
works and doesn't suddenly break people's connections.



    Then there will be the mistakes that come from actually using the new 
software that you are unfamiliar with, and/or cajoling it to do what you need 
it to do and which you already knew how to do with the old software.  People 
will get billed wrong for a while and then you'll have to sort out that mess as 
your customers bring the billing mistakes to your attention.  Some people that 
need to get billed won't be...others will get double-billed.  Pro-rates will 
get miscalculated.  The system will on-hold somebody by mistake that shouldn't 
have been.  And on and on.



    If the software is locally hosted, you can learn a new system and 
transition over to it on your own schedule, instead of being pushed into the 
deep end of the pool on day 1.



    -- Nathan



    From: Af [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of [email protected]
    Sent: Tuesday, October 17, 2017 2:04 PM
    To: [email protected]
    Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Sonar



    Export backups as CSV and you can re-import it into any database.  You will 
only be screwed for a very short time.  



    From: Nathan Anderson 

    Sent: Tuesday, October 17, 2017 2:13 PM

    To: [email protected] 

    Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Sonar



    I have to say that I'm partially with Matt on this one.



    It's really not about access to your own data, although that can certainly 
be a component depending on how things are designed.  It sounds like perhaps 
Sonar has no problem giving you reasonable access to exports of your data for 
you to backup yourself, and for the moment, I'm going to give them the benefit 
of the doubt on this.



    I don't think I have to convince anyone how critical billing software is to 
an organization.  If it screws up or stops working, you are losing money, and 
fast.



    The SaaS model has some clear benefits to both parties (developer and 
user), but it has an equal number of new downsides as well.  One 
big-E-on-the-eyechart one is what happens if the product is discontinued, 
either because the parent company/developers go out of business or for some 
other reason.



    In the traditional software licensing and hosting model, where you use your 
own computing resources to execute the code, if the development company goes 
out of business one day, the software that you still possess a copy of does not 
suddenly become less useful to you.  Sure, you won't get future upgrades and 
fixes to the product from the vendor, but at least you have some time to figure 
out what your options are and how you want to proceed, and you can migrate to a 
new platform on YOUR OWN timetable, not someone else's.  And in the meantime, 
your business operations are not negatively impacted.



    In the SaaS model, it doesn't matter if you have a complete, unabridged, 
and up-to-date export of the data: when the product is discontinued without 
warning, and the company shuts down the software servers, YOU ARE SO SCREWED.  
That data export does you zero good if you don't have product to process and 
interpret and act on it.  In the case of billing software, this means you are 
not collecting payments for service from your customers, which is a big 
problem.  Even if you could find a suitable replacement for the software the 
next day, you still have to figure out how to massage the data export you do 
have so that the new software can import it, work through the inevitable 
imperfections of that import (certain fields from the export that don't map 
cleanly to fields in the new product), learn a new piece of software from 
scratch, and figure out how to get by or work around issues resulting from 
"feature X" that you depended heavily on in the old software but which no 
longer exists in any form in the new one.  Things WILL be complete chaos for a 
while; there's no way around this.



    We are actively looking for a new billing platform, and in the meantime we 
have been running a piece of software that we bought and implemented back when 
it was in active development but which has now been discontinued for years.  
The reason that this is even possible is because it is self-hosted.  Back when 
this product was being developed, it was very popular and sold very well.  
Nothing is "too big to fail"...nothing.  Heck, Google has shitcanned their fair 
share of services over the years after deeming them inviable, leaving devoted 
users of them high-and-dry.



    That we have personally experienced having a billing software vendor go 
belly-up gives us great pause when it comes to evaluating our options in the 
hosted/cloud space.  This is not to say that we would never consider 
billing-in-the-cloud, but it would have to be awfully compelling, and I think 
it would greatly help if there were certain guarantees in place.  One example 
would be if the developer held the source code of the software in escrow, to be 
automatically released if a "dead man's switch" were tripped.  I suspect this 
is what Matt has in mind when he talks about "contracts" -- they are not just 
about protecting the seller, but about protecting both parties.



    -- Nathan



    From: Af [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Matt Hoppes
    Sent: Tuesday, October 17, 2017 11:37 AM
    To: [email protected]
    Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Sonar



    Local install. 


    On Oct 17, 2017, at 13:32, Josh Reynolds <[email protected]> wrote:

      Good luck with that. Any company could close up shop today, and if they 
are bankrupt, they are bankrupt.



      On Oct 17, 2017 12:27 PM, "Matt Hoppes" 
<[email protected]> wrote:

      It also means at any point they can just close up shop leaving my data 
and my customer information high and dry with no recourse.


      On Oct 17, 2017, at 13:24, Josh Reynolds <[email protected]> wrote:

        They provide enough value to  avoid locking you in a contract that 
would otherwise retain your business when they don't continuously earn it.



        Others are NOT the same.



        On Oct 17, 2017 12:22 PM, "Matt Hoppes" 
<[email protected]> wrote:

          No contract?  That's frankly beyond scary. 


          On Oct 17, 2017, at 13:06, Adam Moffett <[email protected]> wrote:

            Sonar is strictly per user with no contract, so if you haven't 
migrated any users in yet then you pay the minimum.....which I think is 
$100/month.





            ------ Original Message ------

            From: "Matt Hoppes" <[email protected]>

            To: [email protected]

            Sent: 10/17/2017 9:16:46 AM

            Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Sonar



              Fail. 


              On Oct 17, 2017, at 08:54, Lewis Bergman 
<[email protected]> wrote:

                Many of them start charging you regardless if you are on their 
system yet. Once you sign the contract, you start paying.



                On Mon, Oct 16, 2017 at 6:00 PM Nathan Anderson 
<[email protected]> wrote:

                  ​I can understand this if the product in question is 
purchased/licensed for a one-time upfront fee.  However, if you have a SaaS 
model with recurring revenues, it seems like it would be in your best interest 
to help the customer move existing data over to your product cost-free, and 
thus get them to be a paying customer ASAP.



                  -- Nathan


--------------------------------------------------------------

                  From: Af <[email protected]> on behalf of Lewis Bergman 
<[email protected]>
                  Sent: Monday, October 16, 2017 3:36 PM
                  To: [email protected]
                  Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Sonar 



                  Yea, this seems to be a common practice in the software 
industry. What they all should really say is that they help you convert. I am 
going through this with ECi at the moment. We paid several thousand for them to 
convert our database. What it really was was a half hearted gesture at putting 
the DB into an excel spreadsheet that they spent zero time checking for sanity. 
They expect us to do all that. 



                  It seems that most software companies expect their customers 
to have a whole team of people doing what seems to be the software companies 
job. Not saying Sonar fits the description, just that that seems to be the rule 
not the exception.



                  On Mon, Oct 16, 2017 at 5:24 PM Sterling Jacobson 
<[email protected]> wrote:

                    Taking forever to migrate from Platypus to Sonar.

                    I was told conversion was free, but they didn't tell me I 
had to do all my own conversion from Plat to Sonar, so in my mind that's not 
free.

                    I paid Spender Lambert to move some initial data to their 
format, but I've been on a hold with Sonar since last month.

                    Super excited to get going with a 'modern' billing system, 
but so far the process has been a total snoozer.





-- 
Simon Westlake
Email: [email protected]
Phone: (702) 447-1247 US / (780) 900-1180 CA
---------------------------
Sonar Software Inc
The future of ISP billing and OSS
https://sonar.software


-- 
Simon Westlake
Email: [email protected]
Phone: (702) 447-1247 US / (780) 900-1180 CA
---------------------------
Sonar Software Inc
The future of ISP billing and OSS
https://sonar.software

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