Blueface Business Plus VoIP Review

Blueface VoIP Logo

I’ve been using Blueface as my personal VoIP provider for the last four years, however I waited until two weeks ago to finally switch WhatClinic.com over to their Business Plus account, migrating from another well known VoIP provider.

Blueface has been in the personal VoIP market for about 5 years but despite having had something of a business offering it only seems to have really started to make progress with businesses accounts during the last 12 months.

I had been meaning to move the WhatClinic.com account for a while as we’d been experiencing intermittent quality problems with our previous VoIP provider resulting in the sales team loosing trust with them and using Skype in preference.

Setup

The setup was quick and easy and completed over the web without the need to talk to anyone in Blueface. It was easy to assign phone numbers to SIP accounts and setup the voicemail. Initially our account only came with four SIP addresses, which seemed a bit odd as it had 8 phone numbers. An email to their support department sorted this out 12 hours later at no extra charge.

We use SMON 320 phones and initially we could only make outgoing calls but not receive incoming calls. A quick look on the Blueface support forums quickly found the solution and we were up and running.

Another problem we ran into was calls were taking up to a minute to initiate, i.e. we would dial a number and it wouldn’t start to ring for up to a minute. This lasted a couple of days and eventually resolved itself without any obvious intervention. I suspect that if we had rebooted our phones it would have sorted the issue immediately.

Self Service

One of the major benefits of Blueface as compared to our previous VoiP provider is their self service interface. This allows us to monitor charges in real time as well as adding new phones and changing voicemail settings. Compared to calling a support line, this is a major time saver and gives us considerably more control. This ease of setup and control means we already have more phones working than we had with our old provider so Blueface is getting more of our business.

Quality

The primary reason we moved provider was because of the intermittent quality of our old setup. As a long term personal user I had high level of confidence that the quality was going to be good, and after two weeks of extensive usage we have found it to be consistently better than either our previous VoIP provider or Skype.

During the two week period we have experienced no quality problems, although like any VoIP provider we expect to have occasional regional outages and have prepared contingency solutions.

Price

The Blueface Business Plus package costs €69 a month and includes 8 direct dial numbers, unlimited UK and Ireland landline calls and 250 mobile minutes. Calls to our international customers are significantly lower than with Skype or our previous VoIP provider on a per minute basis. [It should be noted that Skype have several monthly subscription plans that offer significant savings over their per minute rates.]

Simply put, the price is low enough to make telephony charges to most countries a null issue.

Problems

The phone numbers we were assigned were not all in sequence and neither were our voicemail accounts. It would seem to me that this would be a normal requirement for most businesses and I’m sure I could get it sorted out by contacting Blueface support but I think it should be standard.

Overall

We are very happy so far and I would certainly recommend them based upon our experiences. Having said that we have yet to experience any outage yet and in my experience this is the true acid test of any telecoms provider.

 

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Slice of pie

How much do you keep for yourself?

Too many people regard a revenue share agreement with their partners or affiliates as a zero sum game. They think of it as a pie and the bigger the slice the partner takes the less there is left for them.

If this were true then companies would set their sales people’s compensation to zero; after all it’s a zero sum game so why not take all of the revenue?

However this simply isn’t true. It’s not a zero sum game. Every sales organization knows that putting the right compensation package in place actually increases the size of the pie. So, if you pay your sales people a fixed salary only and have sales of €1 million you could conceivably double your sales by adding a 10% commission to your sales team’s compensation.

Everybody understands this simple idea but most instantly forget it when talking to a channel partner or affiliate. All of a sudden defences go up and a confrontational approach to negotiation is adopted. Too often business owners and sales people congratulate themselves after a negotiation where they manage to squeeze an extra 5% out of the channel. The reality here is that it is likely that no value was created and in all probability value was destroyed.

You must give your channel sufficient compensation to motivate them to sell your product. If you don’t they’ll find something else to sell and ignore your product. Give them more compensation and the chances are they’ll sell more of it.

The question everyone negotiating with a partner should be asking themselves is not “How little can I give them?”, rather it is “If I give the channel a greater share will I make more money?”.

Get Realistic About Your Channels Costs

Chances are no one call sell your product or service as cheaply as you can. After all, you know your product the best, you know the end-customer the best and you know how to sell it the best. In just about all cases a channel is going to find it more difficult and more costly to make a sale than you are.

You cannot get your revenue share agreement right without facing up to the reality of how much it costs to sell your product. I personally know SAAS companies that do not recover the selling costs associated with a new customer until well into year two.  This is quite typically in the SAAS world which relies on high levels of customer renewal for profitability.

However, these very same companies conveniently ignore this fact when they start setting channel revenue share agreements. 50% of first year’s revenue, dropping to 20% is thought of as generous. THESE PEOPLE ARE MAD. If they can’t sell it for 100% of the first year revenue themselves and it’s their baby, how on earth is it reasonable or fair to expect a half motivated channel to be able to sell it for 50% of that.

Remember, the channel’s sales people have their own targets to worry about. It might be their monthly or quarterly target, or even their yearly target, but it is never next year’s target. So don’t fool yourself into thinking that a percentage of future revenue is going to do anything to motivate them.

You have to structure a deal that at a minimum motivates their sales people and covers the partner’s total costs associated with making the sales (not forgetting opportunity costs). Once you’ve done this ask yourself the question: “Will I earn more money by giving them a greater revenue share?”.

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Glengarry Glenross

Always Be Closing

I’m sure there’s a punchline to answer the question posed above, but the serious answer is this: three.

  • One to get the ball rolling.
  • A second to introduce some internal competition and benchmarking.
  • A third in case the first two leave.

You don’t need lots of sales people at the start, but don’t leave yourself in the lurch either!

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Web Application Pricing Review – SEOMOZ

SEOMOZ is a collection of Search Engine Optimization (SEO) tools that automate a wide range of tasks. These include checking a site’s ranking for a selection of keywords, crawling a site for errors, and competitive intelligence. Compared to other SEO tools they have a killer marketing feature credibility.

Not only does the product ooze quality, it was also created by long standing and respected members of the SEO community. In our world, where SEO has become such as distrusted and misunderstood profession, the importance of credibility cannot be overstated.

[Disclosure: We use SEOMOZ at WhatClinic.com, but have no further relationships with the company.]

Test 1 – Simplicity

SEOMOZ Pricing

SEOMOZ Pricing

At first glance the pricing looks pretty overwhelming. There are three plans that each have different volume limits for each of four different feature sets, and to make matters worse each feature set has its own incremental scale, each of which is independent of the overall pricing scale:

SEOMOZ features scale

To a potential first time customer this makes the pricing seem complicated and confusing. To alleviate this SEOMOZ do an extremely good job of promoting the lowest price option and give reassurance that the first 30 day period is risk free.

Test 2 – Market Size

Pricing is definitely set high enough to make SEOMOZ commercially successful with any kind of reasonable market penetration.  If they have any kind of success getting customers onto higher price plans then I could see a tremendous amount of revenue being generated.

Normally I would think that a $99 per month entry was too high as it would exclude the bulk of the market. However, I feel that that this entry point is correct or near correct for SEOMOZ for two reasons.

  1. Price sensitive customers can rationalize a $99 expense by treating the purchase as a single $99 purchase which they then unsubscribe from. I see a slight potential problem here in that the 30 day money back guarantee essentially allows this market segment to game the system and get value for nothing.
  2. The market advantage SEOMOZ has is credibility, which would not be enhanced by low end pricing.

Test 3 – Comparable Pricing

Complete failure here. As a potential customer I have no idea if SEOMOZ is reasonably priced, there is simply no frame of reference. To make matters worse SEOMOZ price points are so distantly spaced that I can’t easily compare one price to another to determine the best one.  I would nearly always recommend having two price points relatively close to each other so that potential customers can directly and easily compare one to the other.

Test 4 – Adoption

The 30 day money back guarantee massively reduces the barrier to entry of the $99 per month price.  None-the-less I think I would prefer to see a massively crippled free version that I would use for lead generation.

For example I think a free plan that crawled just 25 pages and tracked 10 key phrases would be commercially useless but would still allow a potential customer who was wary of entering their credit card details to become comfortable with the product. In addition, amateurs would use it and talk about it which would increase overall market awareness.

Test 5 – Price Discrimination

SEOMOZ discriminate on volume not features. Essentially they’re saying “the more sites that you have & the bigger the sites the more you pay us”. This is a perfectly reasonable method of price discrimination, but I think that some feature discrimination could segment the market further and therefore improve revenues.

For example, I would suggest that the Q&A feature not be made available on the base plan.  This would then create strong pressure to upgrade during an SEO crisis period when the customer’s need of the product is at its highest and their price sensitivity is at its lowest.

SEOMOZ’s price discrimination is extremely aggressive. In fact I think it is far too aggressive. There is a massive difference between $100 a month and $500 a month. There have to be a large number of users on the $99 plan who would happily pay more, but won’t stretch to $500 per month.

Suggested New Pricing

Suggest new SEOMOZ pricing

The main point of this new pricing is the introduction of a new price point closer to the base plan. The base plan has also been reduced in functionality and number of campaigns. I believe that such a pricing structure wouldn’t hurt adoption while providing an attractive upgrade route for satisfied customers.

At this level of pricing I really don’t think that people are going to sign up for anything but the base plan so I think it’s okay that the PRO membership is still clearly the preferable option to start at.

SEOMOZ Pricing Analysis Score Card

Simplicity: 4
Market Size: 9
Comparable Pricing: 2
Adoption: 7
Price Discrimination: 3
   
SEOMOZ Score 5.0

 

Web Application Pricing Review – KISSmetrics

It seems to me that web application pricing has started to come of age.  I was getting sick to the back teeth of start-ups pricing on the 37signals model minus a few dollars. Just as the US lead the free model, now young eager start-ups in the states are driving realistic pricing that genuinely has the potential to create a successful company.

Over the next few weeks I’m going to have a look at a few of them and attempt to dissect their pricing with a view to seeing if their pricing passes the following tests:

  1. Simplicity
  2. Market Size
  3. Comparable Pricing
  4. Adoption
  5. Price Discrimination

A Quick Introduction To KISSmetrics

KISSmetrics is an analytics service that attempts to model a website’s most commercially important interaction with its users – the conversion funnel. Their market is anyone who runs a website commercially and who cares about the performance of their conversion funnel. Value is delivered by providing business intelligence that enables the website owner to intelligently change their interactions with their users, maximizing their revenue as a result.

KISSmetrics Pricing

KISSmetrics Pricing

Test 1 – Simplicity

KISSmetrics has beautifully simple pricing that poses no barrier to comprehension. I can immediately see what pricing plan suits me best.  It almost seems a shame for them to include standard features on this list (Unlimited Reports, A/B Testing, GA Integration) which interfere somewhat with the simplicity.

I have one minor problem with the simplicity of the pricing – what happens if I opt for the 1 million event plan and in one particular month I run 1.1 million events?  Are the last 100K events trashed? Are they stored and subsequently computed if I upgrade. Is a random 100K chunk lost?  In my opinion this needs to be clarified and simplified in the customers’ eyes on the pricing page. For example, change the Events per month values to “First 1 million events”, “First 5 million events” and “First 10 million events”.

Test 2 – Market Size

Pricing affects market size in a variety of different ways. Trivially, market size equals the number of customers multiplied by the average price, so the higher your price the bigger the market. However, higher prices can reduce customer numbers and you can end up excluding part of the market. However, conversely, you can increase your sales/marketing resources allowing you to capture more of the market.

In my view there is no question that KISSmetrics have set pricing high enough so that even if only a small percentage of the market adopts their service the company will be a success. The pricing should also provide KISSmetrics with sufficient resources to be able to go after more market share.

I only offer one proviso here: if KISSmetrics is not as well funded as it seems, then it would pay to offer a heavy discount for annual subscriptions, rather taking slightly more money in the long term delivered as smaller monthly amounts now. That way the money invested in sales can be immediately recycled.

Test 3 – Comparable Pricing

No one wants to pay too much for a product. If a potential customer feels a service may be priced too high many will delay or avoid the purchase. Unfortunately for KISSmetrics the product that is immediately comparable to the first time visitor’s eye is Google analytics, which is free. To make matters worse, KISSmetrics itself ensures that I make this comparison by including ‘Google Analytics integration’ on its pricing page.

In my view, if you cannot provide a favourable external comparison then your own pricing needs to be comparable. I should be able to compare one of your prices against another and get a level of comfort that the package I’m buying is priced competitively. For this to happen two price points need to be close together. KISSmetrics’ pricing fails here.

Test 4 – Adoption

I don’t care what planet you live on but $1,800 a year is a lot of money.  Having entry level pricing at this rate automatically excludes a huge portion of the market that would otherwise derive value from the product. Unless KISSmetrics has high costs associated with a sale (maybe support costs) I would be tempted to look at a lower entry price that was limited in such a way that it wouldn’t cannibalize my higher priced offerings.

KISSmetrics Potential Market Size

KISSmetrics Potential Market Size

This way it would be easier for KISSmetrics to get much wider adoption, and if the pricing was designed correctly they could push customers up their price plans as they prove the value of their product.

Even if a small user with 100K events per month was willing to pay $1,800, the pricing is going to make them feel like an idiot. “Here am I paying for a million events when all I’m going to use is 100,000”. Pricing should make the customer feel like the smartest guy in the world.

Test 5 – Price Discrimination

The goal of price discrimination is to segment the market according to willingness to pay, with a goal of maximising revenue.  KISSmetrics discriminates on one axis only: volume. It’s even debatable if they use price discrimination at all – one bar of chocolate costs X, two bars cost 2X, etc.

Since the distribution of websites by their traffic is a classic power curve (as in the events graph above) the KISSmetrics pricing model will always result in the most customers being on the lowest price plan.

This means that the bulk of the market can only give KISSmetrics $149 a month. Customers with less than 1 million events still get access to all of the features so there is no reason why they would ever adopt a higher price plan. This doesn’t make much sense; it’s kind of like offering a student price for a haircut and then not allowing them to purchase an expensive and more profitable colouring.

What defines willingness to pay for KISSmetrics? This is always difficult to model and generally we have to accept an inaccurate model that works for the bulk of customers but fails for a minority (for example cheap OAP pints fail to account for the millionaire OAPs). For a KISSmetrics’ customer it would seem that the factors that matter are:

  • Volume of events
  • Dollar value of  the margin on the average event
  • Perceived potential improvement that can be expected

The second two factors are difficult to model which is probably why KISSmetric’s have stayed away from pricing off of them. However, I would contend that there are several ideas that would we could look at to help define these factors, albeit inaccurately.

  • Logins. The number of people who want access to the data. A company selling X units at a high price is typically going to have more people who want access to business intelligence than a second company selling the same volume at a lower price.
  • Accounts reconciliation. Refunds and charge backs are likely to be a factor in higher ticket items.  Adding a feature that would allow for the service to be reconciled with month end accounts ensures that refund sales and charge backs are taken out of the analytics and that data is true and accurate. In addition, top-end products may result in the creation of a sales lead rather than an online purchase and being able to reconcile sales with the lead conversion funnel will be valuable.
  • Traffic Spike Overruns. This feature would securely store events that overrun a plan and can subsequently be recovered by paying the transaction fee. The longer a site has been in existence the more iterations it will have been through and given that KISSmetrics is targeting metric driven companies the less perceived improvements there are likely to be. It seems likely that older sites have more predicable traffic with smaller spikes,  so pricing off of this may be able to segment the market (needs more research).

Suggested New Pricing

I’m not going to suggest that this is right; however it should show the rough direction that I would like to move the pricing towards.  Also please accept that I haven’t put in the kind of effort required to make the verbiage easily consumable – clearly a lot of work would be required to get this into any kind of finished form.

Proposed New KISSmetrics Pricing

Proposed New KISSmetrics Pricing

* All accounts get free A/B testing and commoditized website analytics integration (including Google Analytics).

This gives me

  1. A much more attractive market entry price that is sufficiently limited so that it shouldn’t cannibalize my higher priced plans
  2. Pricing is comparable. Silver is obviously much better than Bronze for just 20% more
  3. There is an attempt to segment the top end of the market and to price discriminate accordingly

What do you think of KISSmetrics pricing model? How would you change it to move the company forward? Share your thoughts in the comments.

Also feel free to suggest other web application pricing that I should look at

Your Prices are Too Low

In terms of return for time spent, pricing has the best Return on Investment of any activity. In general when it comes to pricing, startups tend to put their finger in the air and set their initial price depending on the direction of the wind. Once they get any sort of market traction, they shy away from price revision from fear of negatively affecting their hard earned business.  However by focusing on price you can increase net profit by 100% or more.

Why is Price So Significant?

In some ways the importance of price is obvious –after all your revenues equal your price multiplied by volume. But it defines your market size as well and therefore the potential of your company/product – this affects your ability to raise funds. It also sets hard limits on how much you can expend to acquire a customer – so by increasing your price by €100 you can afford to spend an additional €100 in acquiring a customer therefore increase volume.

But the real significance of price is that it can have a dramatic and immediate impact on your business with disproportionally little effort. Beware though; this can be positive and negative and it is the fear of the negative that cripples so many businesses.

Know your Price and know the cost to your customer.

Price does not equal cost to your customer.  Your price is typically only a small constituent of the total cost your customer has to bear.  Frequently with web and software solutions your price is only going to be 10% or less of the total cost to the customers. The lower this proportion the more you can change the price without significantly altering the cost to your customer.

For example say you are migrating an existing 10 person sales team from one CRM system to another, your costs would include:

  • Price of new CRM solution: €5,000 (Salesforce year one fees)
  • Training – €10,000 (1/2 day opportunity cost per employee and cost of delivery)
  • Data Migration – €5,000 (SalesForce consultancy)
  • Evaluation costs – €5,000 (Senior Management purchase decision)
  • Integration costs – €5,000 (integration with email, website, partners, suppliers, etc.)
  • Change Control – €10,000 (product management costs to manage the transition)
  • Risk – €10,000 (normally the largest cost but difficult to quantify)

In the above example the price charged by SalesForce only reflects 10% of the overall costs that have to be borne by the customer. So if SalesForce increased it’s pricing by 50% it would only be increasing the customer’s costs by 5%.

Best of all, because SalesForce’s net profit margin is about 10%, they were only making €500 off of the original deal. By increasing the customers cost by only 5% they can increase their Net Profit by €2,500 – a 500% improvement.

It should become obvious here that they ideal solution would be to make the product easier to use and easier to integrate, so that you can start absorbing training and integration costs into your price. This is never as easy in practice as it is on paper because a lot of buyers don’t recognize the importance of all of their costs.

Your Price is too Low

Unless it’s too high. However, one thing for certain is that it is not 100% optimized. How can I say this with such certainty? Because the world is constantly changing and endlessly diverse.  Your prices may have been right for your US X generation male consumers yesterday, but how about today or what about the South East Asia market?

Most start-ups set their initial pricing too low because they lack confidence, or they are setting a market penetration price. This is fine as long as you revise frequently as you get to know your customer base better.

You should always be looking at how you can increase your prices?

Your Must Price Discriminate

If you are not price discriminating then not only are you leaving money on the table but you are also being unfair to your customers. Some of your customers get much more value from your product than others, its only fair that they should contribute more to the cost of developing the product than others. Also a lack of price discriminiation typically means that you are excluding a whole category of customers that would get some value from your product but aren’t prepared to pay your one size fits all price.

Price discrimination is where you charge two different customers different prices for substantially the same thing (or for different things that largely do not affect your costs). Good examples of price discrimination include:

  • Student haircuts – it take the hairdresser the same amount of time to cut a students hair as anyone else’s
  • Old age pensioner pints – after all they get the same pint
  • Airline tickets – How did that guy get a ticket at 50% the price of mine??
  • Flavoured sugar syrup instead of the free sugar in Starbucks
  • Microsoft Windows (student, home, enterprise, etc.) – Although the product here is different for the enterprise version the price differential is disproportionate to the additional R&D effort
  • Lower cost AIDs medication for 3rd world country.
  • Charging per minute of mobile phone time – the operators costs are largely the capital costs of the network which largely are unaffected by your usage. In other word the additional cost to the operator of you talking for an extra minute on the phone is minimal yet the cost to you is high.

What to Discriminate on

There are an endless number of factors that you can discriminate on – everything from customer demographics to product features. Fundamentally you should try and link your price discrimination through to the customer’s willingness to pay.

When Microsoft charge more for Enterprise edition than home edition they aren’t charging more for the feature set. They are trying to segment their customer base into companies and consumers and charge them different prices. The creation of home and enterprise edition is just a crude way of doing this.

In Summary

Pricing is an incredibly important part of a company’s strategy and doesn’t get anywhere near the attention that it deserves. Not only can pricing dramatically affect the dynamics of your business but it also defines the size of your market size.  Take some time today and look at your pricing – can you increase it? Can you segment your market and create a new price point that will either get you more volume or more revenue per customer.

Do you know of any pricing wins, where a new price point dramatically improved a business?

 

There are three things that really irritate me about A/B testing. The first is where people fool themselves by drawing conclusions from too little data. The second is the myth that small changes frequently result in large improvements and the final one is when A/B tests are used to predict an actual percentage improvement when the data just isn’t there.

You Need a Lot of Data

Instructions for WhatClinic.com

The proposed improvement

We do a lot of A/B testing at WhatClinic.com and we like to think we know a little bit about the topic. We recently ran A/B test where we put a section of instructional text at the top right hand side of the page. After 11,000 tests and 400 conversions it clearly showed that the instructions made a 30% difference. It would have been so easy for us to stop there and pop open the champagne and boast about how changing one little thing improved our bottom line by 30%.

Things look Great - 30% Improvement

But we didn’t, we kept the test running, because experience has told us not to draw conclusions too quickly.  We let the test run on for another 90,000 people and 3,000 conversion and you know what. In the end it turns out that there was no substantial difference between the two. That’s right no difference.

The whole point of A/B testing is to learn. Learn what works and what doesn’t work. If you don’t run your tests over a large enough sample size then there is a good chance you are going to learn a fallacy. Not only won’t you be moving forward but you will actually be moving backwards and decreasing the value of your company.

Where did my 30% improvement go?

So what if you don’t have the traffic to do A/B tests? Well don’t do them. Do user testing. Get people in and ask them to use your product. You’re going to get a lot more information a lot faster and have a higher degree of confidence in the results.

Small Tweaks rarely makes Substantial Differences

I read about these all the time. You know the type of story – “I changed the colour of a button and increased conversion by 25%”. They read great and play into a pleasant dream that riches and fortunes are just a colour change away. However, in my experience small tweaks have never made a substantial difference to conversion.

It should come as no surprise to you that in order to substantially change user behaviour you need a substantial change to the site. This doesn’t mean that it never happens. However, I suspect that it happens rarely and the bulk of the time it is reported on blog and forums that it is the result of drawing conclusions from too little data or just plain old link baiting. Unfortunately the truth is normally all too boring.

A/B test don’t tell you how much better one page will be over another page

A really common misconception is to think that A/B testing can show you how much better one version of a page will perform over a different version of the page. IT CANNOT. A/B testing can only give you a confidence rate of whether one page is better than another and the observed historic improvement.

Highly advanced A/B testing can tell you a confidence rating of whether there will be a 5% improvement or a 10% improvement, etc, but it cannot tell you what the actual improvement will be. Too often people are fooled into thinking that just because they have observed a 30% improvement during the test that there will be a 30% improvement in the future. Whereas the actual results of the test is that version A has a 93% chance of being better than version B – note no prediction of how much better

Let me know of any examples you have where A/B test have first shown one thing then the other.  I know James Kennedy from voiceover Ireland has one on his blog here

Correction

It has been pointed out to me that the above example only shows a 20% improvement, not a 30% improvement.  Sorry for the mistake

 

Introducing WhatClinic.com

WhatClinic.com

On August 10th we are changing our name from RevaHealth.com to WhatClinic.com.

The reasons behind the change are very straightforward. WhatClinic.com is easier to remember, easier to spell, and it does a much better job of explaining what the website does.

These reasons are important because each of them helps increase the traffic to our website, which now stands at over 500,000 people per month, up from 190,000 at the start of the year.

We really want these visitors to remember the name of “that really useful website with all the clinics on it” so they can come back and use us again in the future, helping us to cement a solid user base over time.

Once our visitors can remember our name then they can also recommend us to their friends, and that means even more traffic. With such a simple name there should also be no confusion over the spelling, maximising the effect of any word of mouth recommendations.

For new visitors the name gives a really good indication that the website provides a choice of clinics, which will lead to even higher organic click through from search engine users and help us continue to grow our traffic in yet another way.

In the three years since RevaHealth.com launched we have made fantastic progress towards providing comprehensive information about English speaking health clinics in the UK, Ireland and further afield. As WhatClinic.com we will be taking on that challenge on a global scale.

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Apple iPad In Surprisingly Popular Shocker!

Well, I guess it was bound to happen. We announced we’d give away an iPad to one lucky RevaHealth.com user who filled in our survey and announce the winner in June. With June about to end, and Apple selling over 3 million iPads in their existing markets, the iPad’s Irish release date has been pushed back here until July.

So, to keep things fair to the people who have entered already we’re going to close the competition at midnight tomorrow, and announce the winner on July 1st. Then as soon as the iPad goes on sale here we’ll order it and get it to the winner asap.

Thanks to everyone who has filled out the survey so far. To the rest of you, you’ve got just over 24 hours to add your name to the hat.

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An iPad For Your Thoughts…

You all know the saying “A penny for your thoughts?”. Well it was coined a long time ago and inflation hasn’t really been taken into account so we decide to do something about it. How about “An iPad for your thoughts?”.

We’d really like to know what you think about our main website RevaHealth.com, so we’ve set up a short survey about the site. If you take a look at the top right hand corner of your screen you should see a small banner that says “Take Our Survey“. Just click on it and away you go.

One lucky respondent will become the proud owner of a brand new Apple iPad!

Apple iPad

Win one of these!

We’ll announce the winner here in June and please feel free to pass on a link to this post to anyone else you know who has used RevaHealth.com in the past. There is one important thing to remember though:

If you want to win the iPad, you have to fill in your email address in the last question of the survey.

You need to give us permission to email you or else we can’t tell you that you’ve won!

Best of luck, and thanks in advance for the feedback.

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