Comcast Gets Bizzy With Apps
Comcast Corp.'s cloud strategy for business services has added some SaaS, giving customers new ways to fill up those broadband pipes. (See Comcast: 'The Cloud Changes Everything'.)
The MSO has launched Upware, a cloud-fed, curated app store for small businesses that is starting off with a the following categories, services and vendor partners that customers will be able to access using a single sign-on:
- Data Backup: Carbonite and GlobeX Data Inc.'s DigitalSafe (data backup), and Mozy (online backup).
- Data Security: Symantec Corp./Norton (security) and Websense (security).
- Collaboration: Box (online storage), Microsoft Corp. (Web collaboration), Soonr (online file sharing) and YouSendIt (document collaboration).
Expect Upware customers to get access to some of these services at a discount versus what they'd pay by going direct.
Comcast isn't spelling out the exact business model for Upware or how much of a cut it's getting from sales, but the offer should bring more revenues in the door at a unit that generated $2.4 billion in business services revenues in 2012, and has been growing at an annual rate of more than 30 percent.
The majority of that revenue comes from small business, so, naturally, that's where Upware will focus at the start. Upware's "sweet spot" is businesses with 50 and fewer employees, says Kevin O'Toole, the SVP and GM of new business solutions for Comcast's biz services arm.
He says Comcast is in the process of adding Upware partners, identifying more collaboration services and the addition of CRM (customer relationship management) tools among the expansion targets. "We'll be moving pretty quick in the coming months and quarters," he said.
Upware also marks the latest chapter in Comcast's cloud story for business services, and follows the launch of Business Voice Edge, its hosted PBX offering. (See Comcast Rolls Business Voice Into the Cloud.)
Comcast's build/partner approach differs from how some of its MSO peers are taking on cloud-based services and applications. Two of them, Bright House Networks and Time Warner Cable Inc., have fleshed out those strategies via recent acquisitions. (See Bright House Snaps Up Cloud Services Specialist and TW Cable Buys Into the Cloud.)
— Jeff Baumgartner, Site Editor, Light Reading Cable
| To upload an avatar photo, first complete your Disqus profile. | View the list of supported HTML tags you can use to style comments. | Please read our commenting policy. | |



