The problem isn't just complicated, it's complexity.
Information technology is a company's DNA. It determines how it behaves. How it evolves. What it becomes. Whether or not it survives. But the problem is, most companies, IT is too complex and too expensive for what they need it to do. It uses up resources. It reduces opportunities. It holds you back. It makes you work a certain way. It doesn't evolve. It doesn't change. It creates problems.
But how did it come to this? After all, the IT industry prided itself for years on being the most cutting-edge, most complex force for business the world has ever seen. Well, it turns out that complex isn't always a good idea. In fact, it's twice as likely to be a bad idea: an incredible 66% of all IT projects either fail or fall behind schedule. And cutting edge means cutting everyday people out: each fancy new piece of software requires hours of considerably less fancy training and bug fixing. Worst of all, the more money you throw at IT, the more complicated it gets. You wake up one morning and realise you're building and maintain your own, individual proprietary cancer.
So if the next big thing turned out to be the next big problem, where is the cure coming from? The answer is from a new breed of IT company: one that hates complexity, and hides it miles away from the user. Ready2Go approach is built on exciting things like dullness. The thrill of predictability. And the surprise of absolutely no surprises. How? By giving you freedom from software.
By letting your employees access complex programs through their web browsers instead of running them themselves on their computers, we can help you solve three major problems at the same time: First, you're renting the application rather owning a licence for it, so you've got the freedom to chop and change what you need, when you need it. Second, you've become a customer instead of a manager, stripping the politics out of the decision-making process. Third, you no longer need to manage, upgrade or invest in the application just to use it.
Why? Because the complexity of current IT means companies are spending up to 70% of their IT budget just on fixing existing problems. And that, to us, seems a waste. Especially when their IT could be turning those companies into much more effective organisations.
