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Billing
Systems & Services:
Freeside
The open source billing solution is available both as a
free software download and in a pre-configured appliance. Version 1.9
will be introduced at ISPCON next month.
Ivan Kohler created his ISP billing solution back in 1996 as an employee
of a large regional ISPin 1998, he acquired the copyright to the
code and released it as the open source solution Freeside.
Making the software available for free, Kohler says, proved to be a great
way to get free advertising, and by 2001, it was popular enough that he
began providing Freeside consulting full-time.
And it kept growing. In 2005, Kohler incorporated the company Freeside
Internet Services, Inc., and hired a staff of programmers. "We had a big
contract from a public company, and it provided the impetus to say, 'Okay,
this is absurd: this is more than one person can handle,'" he says. "So
I hired a couple of guys that were already familiar with the code."
At the same time, it's not all that corporateKohler says
his employees all still work from home. "Six months ago, I got an office,
which is weird for mebut my girlfriend's very happy about it," he
says. "And maybe the employees will get to where they want offices at
some point, but right now they're all happy working out of their homes."
The fact that Freeside is open source, Kohler says, remains one of the
application's key selling points. "That's always been something that people
are very interested innot having to worry about paying royalty costs
as they grow, not having to pay licensing costs for add-on modules, or
anything like that," he says.
A hardware option
Over the past few years, Kohler says, Freeside's customer base has expanded
significantly. "While we do still have customers that are small mom-and-pop
ISPs, the product has really grown up," he says. "Our bread and butter
is not very small companies any more, but companies of a larger size.
And we've also diversified: we're not only focused on ISPs these dayswe
also do a ton of work for voice over IP providers and software-as-a-service
providers."
Also relatively new to the offering is a suite of server
appliances with Freeside preinstalled, ranging in price from $2,950
to $7,900. Kohler says the appliances offer two key benefits. "One, it
comes pre-configured and plugs into your network," he says. "Two, because
it's a piece of hardware, it can be treated as a different kind of expense
than paying us for consultingsomeone can buy it and depreciate it
over five years, or get a lease on it from a leasing provider, things
that they weren't able to do when all we provided was a consulting service.
So it's been wonderfully successful for us: about three quarters of our
customers go with the hardware appliance these days."
Compared to the $2,000 installation
service that Freeside offers, Kohler says, the appliance is a great
deal: it also comes with (depending on the model) between two and six
months of support, and between one and five years of security updates.
"The idea is that it starts to be a complete package," he says. "You say,
'Okay, I'll buy thisI know I get the hardware, I can plug it into
my network, I know the guys behind it will help me support the software
and get it all up and running for me, and I know I'm covered for my first
two or four or six months of support.'"
Introducing version 1.9
The software itself has also grown enormously. To support the company's
VoIP customers, a robust new rating engine has been added, along with
the integration of the Request
Tracker open source ticketing system. "We added the ability to link
tickets to customers, made it aware of a customer base, and integrated
it into our application," Kohler says.
Freeside's customer interface remains entirely web-basedand Kohler
says it's now much easier for customers to integrate directly with the
application as well. "We made all the functionality available with a web
services interface," he says. "So our advanced customers are now writing
their own interfaces in PHP and Java and .NET, and then using the web
services interface to integrate to the back end."
The software is currently in version 1.7.3at ISPCON
next month, the company will be introducing version 1.9, which boasts
an entirely rewritten billing and collection engine that gives users much
more flexibility in automating late billing and collection events. "It's
written as a very general state machine event system," Kohler says.
Looking at the application as a whole, Kohler says Freeside's strengths
now reach far beyond the software's open source roots. "A lot of our customers
consider the licensing an advantage, and a lot of our customers could
care less," he says. "With the billing and the advanced trouble ticketing
system, we really offer a package that's comparable to the best packages
out there, whatever their licensing is."
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