allow me to introduce myself first, so you know where I'm comming from. My name is Jaap van Ekris, I'm a Microsoft Most Valuable Professional for Windows Mobile devices. I support a couple of large communities on a more-or-less continous basis. I also give companies advice (do not sell!) about mobile solutions.
First I have to say I must congratualate you for building such a complete product. It really is top-of-the bill (and I know, because I am comparing all open source groupware solutions compatible with Windows Mobile).
Strong point, and I applaud you for this. The reverse engineering road is dangerous and full of holes. A route best not taken when providing a commercial product that people depend on for their business.florian wrote:unfortunately the answer is no; one thing is that the license we have from Microsoft is something we have to pay for as well and we are offering the product at a pretty competitive pricing with very little profit on our side actually. We decided to go this way to be able to offer our customers a legally sound solution that is not reverse-engineered and also as full-featured as possible, based on the official specs from them.
True, in the end the people have to eat and you should make a cut somewhere to give people an incentive to start paying you guys some money.florian wrote:Furthermore, please also - as a community user - understand that we have to continue offering some features for the commercial versions only as this is what we ultimately need to survive as a business.
Here we disagree.florian wrote:We do believe, however, that making a cut with ActiveSync is logical and makes sense - most wireless devices would do mobile email over simple IMAP, which is free. Someone who really needs the additional features of ActiveSync, such as Push Email, wireless real-time calendar and contact synchronisation and system directory access is most likely someone who uses this for work or in a business.
In my experience as a community leader for a huge board, one of the most prominent questions is how to share calendering information with the rest of the family. Basically men want to get rid of the annoying "where are you now, and at what time are you going to get home?" kind of questions. I realize that I have a slightly biased view because on communities you do tend to find the tech-savy people, but there certainly is a need.
Syncing OTA (not pushing) especially Calendar info (but also tasks and contacts) is something home users really find interesting because it reduces the strain on information exchange with the home-front. OTA sync is an important step here for two reasons:
- people want to be able to sync remotely, when things change on the road
- people really start to resent having to fire up their laptop just be able to sync when they get home. They will fire up the PDA and connect it to their own home-network, but firing up a laptop after a long day is something people start to resent.
florian wrote:I think it is fair that such a person should pay us something, and given that the smallest packaging of Scalix is a Small Business Edition for 20 Users, that, together with ActiveSync, will sell for less than $1000 end user list price, I would feel it's reasonable.
Here we agree partially,
I always see Community Editions of products as a stepping-stone for the SOHO user. Small companies normally start really small without any money and slowly grow. Trick is to offer that kind of companies a good product at a extremely sharp price and then grow along with these companies as they start growing (slowly taking small pieces of money from them).
Please note that "sharp price" for the product does not imply "free as in beer"

For your info, I used OpenGroupware before this and I had to buy licences for my Outlook connector (€150 for a product that does not allow syncing) as well as for a decent SyncML engine (Funabol is really a lousy product, so I had to pay Synthesis €150 as well) and decent SyncML clients (€60 in total). I realize that this is a bit skewed because it time it was a "small investment" to finally get it right, but it does show that I (and probably others) are willing to invest something in order to solve their problem.
I think that if you removed high-end features (like PUSH-e-mail and system directory access) and added a bit to the price, you can still keep trigger small companies into jumping towards SBE, while providing a very basic CE.
Hosted solutions have two major drawbacks for me personally:florian wrote:If this is too expensive for you, you may want to look out for hosted Scalix altogether, which more and more hosting providers start offering. This is especially true as with rising energy cost, just running a full-fledged server machine on your own becomes expensive, especially when you add the cost to administer and maintain.....
- many small companies (like lawyers and notaries for example) are not allowed to use hosted solutions: they deal with mergers and aquisitions of companies, making e-mail and meeting-requests extremely sensitive information. but also courrt lawyers face the same problem. A friend of mine runs a small company installing/maintaining MS SBS for this kind of companies, and he earns a pretty decent living out of that sweetspot.
- Open source also means open to integration. When it is hosted I can't integrate it into other solutions easily. To me personally, as a home user, I'd like to integrate it with Freevo so my wife can see on the HTPC interface what meetings I have (calling me where I am is easier that turning on a laptop...).
I know this is a gamble on your side, but it could also mean that you could sell "additional features" to people you normally would not see any money from anyway (i.e. CE-users) and it might harm your real business (SBE licenses). The users you normally wouldn't see is the SOHO of 4 users. Now they would pay you something like €160 for a good functioning product with AS-OTA. By the time they reach 25 users they already payed you €1000 euro for OTA ActiveSync licences. Or you could limit it to 10 users (linking AS OTA to the outlook users) They pay the switch to SBE and you automatically activate the hot features for ActiveSync, you keeping the extra margin. It is still win-win for everybody: they pay you and they get more features, it just grows more gradual. Smarter companies will probably anticipate that they will outgrow their licenses quickly and start with SBE for more functionality and cheaper AS-OTA licences. This basically is what Skyrix does with its outlook connector for about 5 years now, and they still exist

I do know that if you would sell it as an add-on to the CE-product, it would make Scalix one of the hottest products in the market: a SOHO of 4 users would pay something like €160 for a good functioning product.
Jaap