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Weekly Review: Old ASP Ideas Are New Again
May 13, 2002: In this week's commentary: Enthusiastic entrepreneurs are coming up with the same plans that failed previously. But with history as a guide, failed ideas might just fly this time around.
A few months ago, a pair of would-be entrepreneurs contacted me for advice on a business idea that they'd developed. "It seems such an obvious proposition, and yet as far as we can see, no one else is doing this," they told me as we set up an appointment to meet.
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The reason why I offer consulting as a sideline business is that it keeps me in contact with what's really happening out there in the market, as opposed to what the industry's vendors, analysts and journalists believe is going on. Because I specialize in ASP and Web services business models, it keeps me focussed on the practicalities of implementing and marketing business propositions in these emerging sectors (it's fortunate this is what I do it for, rather than the money, which startups these days are always very short of).
I'm always ready to hear virtually anything in the first meeting with a prospective new client, but this was, quite literally, the last thing I had expected. I explained that their proposition had indeed not only been tried but had proved the downfall of an entire swathe of the first generation of ASPs, from startups like FutureLink to big names like the a-Services venture by Cable & Wireless. The pair had had trouble finding anyone doing the same thing they had in mind, for the simple reason that they'd started looking just after the last of those who had tried before them had finally expired.
The Energy of the Innocent
Since I'm always wary of writing off any idea as having no chance whatsoever, I concluded with the thought that, perhaps at the very moment when everyone has rejected the concept, the time is now ripe to make a successful business out of it. There are technologies available today that counteract many of the management and deployment challenges faced by first-generation ASPs, much of it developed as a direct result of their experiences. It may never be a goldmine, but there's every chance that such a business today might well produce a moderate and sustainable return. I wished them well with the venture and took my leave. I haven't heard from them since.
Fresh Look at Passing Fads
Why should they know any different? They've been getting on with their lives, immersed in their work, their families and their outside interests, never once having any cause to look into the niche fads of each passing year. They arrive at the concept with a completely fresh approach, simultaneously ignorant of and yet advantaged by the accumulated wisdom of others who've come and gone before them.
Thanks to this encounter, I'm no longer surprised by or derisive of new entrants into the ASP market, however outdated and bankrupt their proposition appears to be at first sight.
A Yen for the ASP Model
How can I, without knowing the details of the proposition, dismiss the plan as a naive, inadequately researched and ultimately doomed adventure by the Japanese computing giant? "The Applications on the Fly (AppFly) service ... will allow user companies to launch an ASP-based application software distribution service," reported Japanese news agency NDC. Independent software vendors (ISVs), ISPs or enterprise users will be able to set up applications for an initial fee of 750,000 yen ($5,859), followed by a monthly fee per 100 users of 70,000 yen ($547).
Learn From the Past
Phil Wainewright founded ASPnews.com in 1998 and is the publisher of Loosely Coupled. He can be contacted at
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