Appirio believes that within five to 10 years, some companies will move their entire IT infrastructures to the cloud. It's betting they'll need help getting there.
Interested in moving your on-premises business apps to run on Amazon Web Services or Salesforce.com's Force.com? Appirio can help with that. It's establishing partnerships with cloud service providers--Amazon, Google, and Salesforce, for starters--to complement its own application development and integration expertise.
With nearly 100 employees, Appirio is backed by Sequoia and led by a group of WebMethods veterans, including CEO Chris Barbin, VP of marketing and technology Narinder Singh, and chief architect Jason Ouellette. "We accelerate companies' moves to on-demand," Barbin says. "The technology is there. The question the CIO is raising is, 'How?'"
Appirio's products and services, partnerships with cloud and SaaS providers, and expertise in application integration in the cloud are a unique mix, and give it a head start against potential competitors such as IBM and Wipro Technologies, Barbin says. The company is already profitable, and its expanding customer list includes Honeywell, Lincoln Financial Group, and the 2008 Republican National Convention. It's done consulting or application development for 100 businesses, with more than 40 implementations of Google Apps.
One of Appirio's first application development customers was self-service publisher Author Solutions. For a fee, writers can have Author Solutions edit, print, and distribute their books through stores such as Barnes & Noble and Amazon. When CEO Kevin Weiss took over the rapidly growing $50 million-a-year company in January, he found its IT systems "being held together by Band-Aids and chewing gum." Now, transactions, the marketing system, proofreading, content uploads, and even workflow for the publishing capabilities all take place in a Force.com app that Appirio helped build.
"It's an order of magnitude less time to add more product, change the way we present data to customers, or integrate an acquisition," Weiss says. The company's new way of doing business also is a way to attract technical talent, since it's on the cutting edge of on-demand IT, he says.
Barbin admits that we're still in the early days of cloud computing, and that many companies simply aren't ready to make the move. Large services firms loom as eventual competitors, and the major software vendors are looking to jump into the cloud, too.
"Cloudsourcing's not going to be for everybody," he says, "but just like you saw a wave of people outsourcing, you'll see it here."
Front Lines Of Cloudsourcing
Elastra:
A Dual-Purpose Server
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Kaavo:
Cross-Vendor Cloud Control
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Nirvanix:
Beyond Online Storage
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Engine Yard:
Cloud Takes On A Ruby Hue
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Appirio:
Front Lines Of Cloudsourcing
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RightScale:
Fine-Tuning The Cloud
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Skytap:
Virtual Software Testing
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CohesiveFT:
Servers As A Service
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Who's Who Among Cloud Startups
Page 7:
RightScale: Fine-Tuning The Cloud
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