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    A Mandate to Be Cheap

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    • pchiodoP
      pchiodo @scottalanmiller
      last edited by

      @scottalanmiller said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

      @Dashrender said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

      @scottalanmiller said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

      @Dashrender That was very possibly a case where he failed to convey who was the IT Manager and got burned for it. Someone felt that he was a decision maker when he was not and it spread. Once people start repeating that stuff, it becomes the accepted truth. It's so important to never let that happen.

      I'm sure I am personally in that situation - If I took a pole of staff and management, who is the IT manager/decision maker, I bet most (meaning more than 80%) would say I am. This is simply not the case though. If I want to spend more than $1000 it has to be approved by either my boss (the CEO) or, and more likely, the BOD.

      Approved to spend is not quite the same. That they probe your logic is not the same as them making the decision.

      We have a general "budget" based primarily on a guess as too how much new stuff will cost at time of replacement, along with another guess as to the growth, topped off with a pretty good number on subscriptions, licensing, and maintenance.

      We don't add in payroll, as this just skews numbers IMHO.

      At the end of the day though, we always review the projects, the estimated costs, and then, of course, quote out the solution. Then we meet as a team, including ownership, and decide whether to proceed or not.

      All of this is based on what is best for the company.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • pchiodoP
        pchiodo @scottalanmiller
        last edited by

        @scottalanmiller said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

        @art_of_shred said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

        Perhaps you meant "Poll"

        Except that is not a pole in the picture... it is a staff.

        Staff on a pole.

        It was the best I could find on short notice.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • art_of_shredA
          art_of_shred Banned @scottalanmiller
          last edited by

          @scottalanmiller said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

          @art_of_shred said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

          Perhaps you meant "Poll"

          Except that is not a pole in the picture... it is a staff.

          Staff on a pole.

          No, it's more like staff on a staff. That's a Bo staff, not a pole.

          art_of_shredA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • art_of_shredA
            art_of_shred Banned @art_of_shred
            last edited by

            @art_of_shred said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

            @scottalanmiller said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

            @art_of_shred said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

            Perhaps you meant "Poll"

            Except that is not a pole in the picture... it is a staff.

            Staff on a pole.

            No, it's more like staff on a staff. That's a Bo staff, not a pole.

            If they were strippers, that would be staff on a pole. @pchiodo ... go fish!

            AdamFA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • AdamFA
              AdamF @art_of_shred
              last edited by

              @art_of_shred said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

              @art_of_shred said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

              @scottalanmiller said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

              @art_of_shred said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

              Perhaps you meant "Poll"

              Except that is not a pole in the picture... it is a staff.

              Staff on a pole.

              No, it's more like staff on a staff. That's a Bo staff, not a pole.

              If they were strippers, that would be staff on a pole. @pchiodo ... go fish!

              I left this thread a few hours ago to go to some meetings, and come back to find this thread 189 posts long, with strippers and poles in the last few posts. This site is amazing.

              dafyreD scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 2
              • dafyreD
                dafyre @AdamF
                last edited by

                @fuznutz04 said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                @art_of_shred said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                @art_of_shred said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                @scottalanmiller said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                @art_of_shred said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                Perhaps you meant "Poll"

                Except that is not a pole in the picture... it is a staff.

                Staff on a pole.

                No, it's more like staff on a staff. That's a Bo staff, not a pole.

                If they were strippers, that would be staff on a pole. @pchiodo ... go fish!

                I left this thread a few hours ago to go to some meetings, and come back to find this thread 189 posts long, with strippers and poles in the last few posts. This site is amazing.

                You and me both... and yes. Yes it is!

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                • scottalanmillerS
                  scottalanmiller @AdamF
                  last edited by

                  @fuznutz04 said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                  @art_of_shred said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                  @art_of_shred said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                  @scottalanmiller said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                  @art_of_shred said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                  Perhaps you meant "Poll"

                  Except that is not a pole in the picture... it is a staff.

                  Staff on a pole.

                  No, it's more like staff on a staff. That's a Bo staff, not a pole.

                  If they were strippers, that would be staff on a pole. @pchiodo ... go fish!

                  I left this thread a few hours ago to go to some meetings, and come back to find this thread 189 posts long, with strippers and poles in the last few posts. This site is amazing.

                  10/10 would post again.

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • art_of_shredA
                    art_of_shred Banned
                    last edited by

                    I'm still waiting for @pchiodo to come back with an appropriate (maybe not "appropriate") picture...

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • olivierO
                      olivier @DustinB3403
                      last edited by olivier

                      @DustinB3403 said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                      @Dashrender said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                      @DustinB3403 said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                      @Dashrender said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                      @coliver said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                      @Dashrender said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                      @scottalanmiller said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                      @DustinB3403 said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                      The term cheap to me (and I think others) means it needs to perform to the level that we can still run production (or whatever the use case is) and save more money than what we may have been proposed before.

                      That's an undefinable definition. Cheap but not the cheapest, good but not the best for us. So not the best option for the business, but not recklessly cheap. How do you make decisions around that? How do you decide what is "cheap enough" while being "not so bad" but not just choosing "what is best for the financial interest of the business?"

                      I'm seriously, without a clear definition but also without the goal of doing what is right for the business... what's the motivator for this? What makes something the lesser choice, but good enough?

                      Isn't part of being the best solution also having the lowest cost while still getting all of the needed items from that solution?

                      Right, but cheap denotes that you are making sacrifices that would stop you from getting the best solution for you business. At least to me it does.

                      So can it be cheaper and still solve the problem and not be the best?

                      Xen Orchestra from the sources is as cheap as it gets (because of the functionality of it). Meaning the XO Updater script, the capability to install it in a matter of minutes.

                      The fact that XO by it's self is disposable, and recreated in minutes.

                      Not that I don't love @olivier for the work he's created, but the source option is literally the best choice for this business.

                      is it? Could you spend the time you spend updating XO doing other things that are more valuable to the company? Maybe? Maybe not?

                      ./xo-update.sh

                      It's a 15 second command at most, that installs the most current updates. How much value can be squeezed out of 15 seconds?

                      It can even be scheduled via cron...

                      I feel I will "laugh" a bit when we'll migrate some data via the updater and a special script because we changed the data structure for a lot of technical reasons. Remember that doing that don't mean you have control. It could also break your install anytime due to npm.

                      A lot of customers don't want to take that risk. XOA price is not the software, it's the support.

                      DustinB3403D scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • DustinB3403D
                        DustinB3403 @olivier
                        last edited by

                        @olivier Hey that's why we have a beta system.

                        🙂

                        olivierO 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • olivierO
                          olivier @DustinB3403
                          last edited by

                          @DustinB3403 said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                          @olivier Hey that's why we have a beta system.

                          🙂

                          So you have to maintain a beta system, find out when it breaks, migrate the data (if it happens) and check how to do that, and then update the production.

                          That's OK, but it starts to cost time...

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                          • scottalanmillerS
                            scottalanmiller @olivier
                            last edited by

                            @olivier said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                            @DustinB3403 said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                            @Dashrender said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                            @DustinB3403 said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                            @Dashrender said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                            @coliver said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                            @Dashrender said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                            @scottalanmiller said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                            @DustinB3403 said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                            The term cheap to me (and I think others) means it needs to perform to the level that we can still run production (or whatever the use case is) and save more money than what we may have been proposed before.

                            That's an undefinable definition. Cheap but not the cheapest, good but not the best for us. So not the best option for the business, but not recklessly cheap. How do you make decisions around that? How do you decide what is "cheap enough" while being "not so bad" but not just choosing "what is best for the financial interest of the business?"

                            I'm seriously, without a clear definition but also without the goal of doing what is right for the business... what's the motivator for this? What makes something the lesser choice, but good enough?

                            Isn't part of being the best solution also having the lowest cost while still getting all of the needed items from that solution?

                            Right, but cheap denotes that you are making sacrifices that would stop you from getting the best solution for you business. At least to me it does.

                            So can it be cheaper and still solve the problem and not be the best?

                            Xen Orchestra from the sources is as cheap as it gets (because of the functionality of it). Meaning the XO Updater script, the capability to install it in a matter of minutes.

                            The fact that XO by it's self is disposable, and recreated in minutes.

                            Not that I don't love @olivier for the work he's created, but the source option is literally the best choice for this business.

                            is it? Could you spend the time you spend updating XO doing other things that are more valuable to the company? Maybe? Maybe not?

                            ./xo-update.sh

                            It's a 15 second command at most, that installs the most current updates. How much value can be squeezed out of 15 seconds?

                            It can even be scheduled via cron...

                            I feel I will "laugh" a bit when we'll migrate some data via the updater and a special script because we changed the data structure for a lot of technical reasons. Remember that doing that don't mean you have control. It could also break your install anytime due to npm.

                            A lot of customers don't want to take that risk. XOA price is not the software, it's the support.

                            Absolutely, it's all about support. And it makes sense for most "greater than one" man shops. Or for those that are overworked or lack the skills to self maintain.

                            olivierO 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • olivierO
                              olivier @scottalanmiller
                              last edited by olivier

                              @scottalanmiller said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                              @olivier said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                              @DustinB3403 said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                              @Dashrender said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                              @DustinB3403 said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                              @Dashrender said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                              @coliver said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                              @Dashrender said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                              @scottalanmiller said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                              @DustinB3403 said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                              The term cheap to me (and I think others) means it needs to perform to the level that we can still run production (or whatever the use case is) and save more money than what we may have been proposed before.

                              That's an undefinable definition. Cheap but not the cheapest, good but not the best for us. So not the best option for the business, but not recklessly cheap. How do you make decisions around that? How do you decide what is "cheap enough" while being "not so bad" but not just choosing "what is best for the financial interest of the business?"

                              I'm seriously, without a clear definition but also without the goal of doing what is right for the business... what's the motivator for this? What makes something the lesser choice, but good enough?

                              Isn't part of being the best solution also having the lowest cost while still getting all of the needed items from that solution?

                              Right, but cheap denotes that you are making sacrifices that would stop you from getting the best solution for you business. At least to me it does.

                              So can it be cheaper and still solve the problem and not be the best?

                              Xen Orchestra from the sources is as cheap as it gets (because of the functionality of it). Meaning the XO Updater script, the capability to install it in a matter of minutes.

                              The fact that XO by it's self is disposable, and recreated in minutes.

                              Not that I don't love @olivier for the work he's created, but the source option is literally the best choice for this business.

                              is it? Could you spend the time you spend updating XO doing other things that are more valuable to the company? Maybe? Maybe not?

                              ./xo-update.sh

                              It's a 15 second command at most, that installs the most current updates. How much value can be squeezed out of 15 seconds?

                              It can even be scheduled via cron...

                              I feel I will "laugh" a bit when we'll migrate some data via the updater and a special script because we changed the data structure for a lot of technical reasons. Remember that doing that don't mean you have control. It could also break your install anytime due to npm.

                              A lot of customers don't want to take that risk. XOA price is not the software, it's the support.

                              Absolutely, it's all about support. And it makes sense for most "greater than one" man shops. Or for those that are overworked or lack the skills to self maintain.

                              Exactly!

                              edit: "overworked" is not the only reason. Responsibilities are another. A lot of companies won't buy a software if there is no one behind.

                              scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • olivierO
                                olivier
                                last edited by

                                Extra note: if a one man shop is using XO to make a living, that's business critical. And if you can't afford pro support for your core business, that's a risk.

                                scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                • scottalanmillerS
                                  scottalanmiller @olivier
                                  last edited by

                                  @olivier said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                                  @scottalanmiller said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                                  @olivier said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                                  @DustinB3403 said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                                  @Dashrender said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                                  @DustinB3403 said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                                  @Dashrender said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                                  @coliver said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                                  @Dashrender said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                                  @scottalanmiller said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                                  @DustinB3403 said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                                  The term cheap to me (and I think others) means it needs to perform to the level that we can still run production (or whatever the use case is) and save more money than what we may have been proposed before.

                                  That's an undefinable definition. Cheap but not the cheapest, good but not the best for us. So not the best option for the business, but not recklessly cheap. How do you make decisions around that? How do you decide what is "cheap enough" while being "not so bad" but not just choosing "what is best for the financial interest of the business?"

                                  I'm seriously, without a clear definition but also without the goal of doing what is right for the business... what's the motivator for this? What makes something the lesser choice, but good enough?

                                  Isn't part of being the best solution also having the lowest cost while still getting all of the needed items from that solution?

                                  Right, but cheap denotes that you are making sacrifices that would stop you from getting the best solution for you business. At least to me it does.

                                  So can it be cheaper and still solve the problem and not be the best?

                                  Xen Orchestra from the sources is as cheap as it gets (because of the functionality of it). Meaning the XO Updater script, the capability to install it in a matter of minutes.

                                  The fact that XO by it's self is disposable, and recreated in minutes.

                                  Not that I don't love @olivier for the work he's created, but the source option is literally the best choice for this business.

                                  is it? Could you spend the time you spend updating XO doing other things that are more valuable to the company? Maybe? Maybe not?

                                  ./xo-update.sh

                                  It's a 15 second command at most, that installs the most current updates. How much value can be squeezed out of 15 seconds?

                                  It can even be scheduled via cron...

                                  I feel I will "laugh" a bit when we'll migrate some data via the updater and a special script because we changed the data structure for a lot of technical reasons. Remember that doing that don't mean you have control. It could also break your install anytime due to npm.

                                  A lot of customers don't want to take that risk. XOA price is not the software, it's the support.

                                  Absolutely, it's all about support. And it makes sense for most "greater than one" man shops. Or for those that are overworked or lack the skills to self maintain.

                                  Exactly!

                                  edit: "overworked" is not the only reason. Responsibilities are another. A lot of companies won't buy a software if there is no one behind.

                                  Not in one man shops, though. The logic that they need support for their software normally carries over to IT and a single man can't reasonably support the internal IT in the same manner that they would want. So the two really don't go together.

                                  olivierO 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • scottalanmillerS
                                    scottalanmiller @olivier
                                    last edited by

                                    @olivier said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                                    Extra note: if a one man shop ... that's a risk.

                                    FTFY

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • olivierO
                                      olivier @scottalanmiller
                                      last edited by

                                      @scottalanmiller said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                                      @olivier said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                                      @scottalanmiller said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                                      @olivier said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                                      @DustinB3403 said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                                      @Dashrender said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                                      @DustinB3403 said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                                      @Dashrender said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                                      @coliver said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                                      @Dashrender said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                                      @scottalanmiller said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                                      @DustinB3403 said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                                      The term cheap to me (and I think others) means it needs to perform to the level that we can still run production (or whatever the use case is) and save more money than what we may have been proposed before.

                                      That's an undefinable definition. Cheap but not the cheapest, good but not the best for us. So not the best option for the business, but not recklessly cheap. How do you make decisions around that? How do you decide what is "cheap enough" while being "not so bad" but not just choosing "what is best for the financial interest of the business?"

                                      I'm seriously, without a clear definition but also without the goal of doing what is right for the business... what's the motivator for this? What makes something the lesser choice, but good enough?

                                      Isn't part of being the best solution also having the lowest cost while still getting all of the needed items from that solution?

                                      Right, but cheap denotes that you are making sacrifices that would stop you from getting the best solution for you business. At least to me it does.

                                      So can it be cheaper and still solve the problem and not be the best?

                                      Xen Orchestra from the sources is as cheap as it gets (because of the functionality of it). Meaning the XO Updater script, the capability to install it in a matter of minutes.

                                      The fact that XO by it's self is disposable, and recreated in minutes.

                                      Not that I don't love @olivier for the work he's created, but the source option is literally the best choice for this business.

                                      is it? Could you spend the time you spend updating XO doing other things that are more valuable to the company? Maybe? Maybe not?

                                      ./xo-update.sh

                                      It's a 15 second command at most, that installs the most current updates. How much value can be squeezed out of 15 seconds?

                                      It can even be scheduled via cron...

                                      I feel I will "laugh" a bit when we'll migrate some data via the updater and a special script because we changed the data structure for a lot of technical reasons. Remember that doing that don't mean you have control. It could also break your install anytime due to npm.

                                      A lot of customers don't want to take that risk. XOA price is not the software, it's the support.

                                      Absolutely, it's all about support. And it makes sense for most "greater than one" man shops. Or for those that are overworked or lack the skills to self maintain.

                                      Exactly!

                                      edit: "overworked" is not the only reason. Responsibilities are another. A lot of companies won't buy a software if there is no one behind.

                                      Not in one man shops, though. The logic that they need support for their software normally carries over to IT and a single man can't reasonably support the internal IT in the same manner that they would want. So the two really don't go together.

                                      XOA isn't really targeting directly "one man shops", except if it's a core business (ie selling the tool to people or rely on it's working to not go out of business if there is a problem)

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • scottalanmillerS
                                        scottalanmiller
                                        last edited by

                                        A one man shop, in case of an emergency, doesn't have the resources to even know who to contact for support when things break because the one person that knows everything is gone when a disaster strikes (often.)

                                        olivierO 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                        • olivierO
                                          olivier @scottalanmiller
                                          last edited by

                                          @scottalanmiller said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                                          A one man shop, in case of an emergency, doesn't have the resources to even know who to contact for support when things break because the one person that knows everything is gone when a disaster strikes (often.)

                                          A one man shop isn't a shop with there is one people inside it? Or you mean "one IT guy shop"?

                                          scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • DashrenderD
                                            Dashrender
                                            last edited by Dashrender

                                            @olivier said in A Mandate to Be Cheap:

                                            Or you mean "one IT guy shop"?

                                            this

                                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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