What Business Software Runs Your Office? 60
bardkerbie asks: "I work as a webmaster and sysadmin for a small computer services shop (4 employees including the owner). We're to a point in the growth of our business where we need a system for tracking work orders as they come in and out of the shop, specifically inventory used and time spent. We use Quickbooks Pro 2006 for our accounting and payroll software. I've played around with a number of issue-tracking and CRM suites, including Bugzilla, Eventum, SugarCRM and vTiger, but all seem like they lack one critical piece to handle the workload we have. What do you use for tracking the work you do? Is it something you wrote yourself? Is there an open-source project that works well, or is there a Quickbooks plug-in we can purchase?"
What platform? (Score:3, Informative)
As a small shop you have the freedom to do things right from the start and not be locked into some legacy system someone put together in the 70's or 80's.
My advice to you is to code your own software and have it as a web service that you run from a beater server in the office. That way as long as there are browsers you'll never be locked in to one vendor, and as your business grows and you have to travel more you can access what you need on the road.
One or Zero (Score:2, Informative)
Trac (Score:3, Informative)
CRM and ERP (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Dunno if you meant that as a slam... (Score:4, Informative)
Someone always comes up with an idea which they'd like to follow through with but is somehow difficult with vTiger.
Yes, I know there's the "it's open source, modify it yourself!" argument. I took one look at the vTiger code and ran away screaming.
Don't get me wrong, I couldn't code something like that up myself - but even so, I think the standards the folk behind vTiger have for what they describe as a "stable" release are a little slack. Just to put it into context, I don't consider "stable" release to mean "most of the core features are there and stable but there's a whole lot of stuff (including the "upgrade from earlier version" function) which isn't particularly stable at all, is not specifically marked as being unstable so you may not know until it's too late and hasn't been disabled for the release.
Further, I was particularly interested to note that the failure mode in much of vTiger (particularly if there's something even relatively minor amiss with the database) seems to be "return a completely blank page to the user's browser and don't log the issue".
Try RT (Score:3, Informative)
It was what my previous employer used. It has lots of features, and is quite easy to use and setup.
Re:You're scaring me. (Score:2, Informative)
There is one place that uses Access for their primary customer relationship management and incident tracking system on a 10m+ gbp/year contract. The databased was pulled together by a regular member of staff, not a developer. It was written for Access 97 in 2005.
Why? Because based on internal charging rules (designed to move margin around) getting an internal development group to do it would have made the bid unwinnable. So instead they settled on this solution. This kind of thing is more common than you think.
From someone in a similar boat... (Score:2, Informative)
I'm also in a small shop with four people, we do general network planning and setup for local companies. Personally, I've been investigating the viability of TinyERP [tinyerp.com] for the job. I'd imagine that a lot of the replies received will mention the same packages as in this recent slashdot article. http://ask.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=07/05/11/21 25226 [slashdot.org]
I certainly won't cry dupe because I was looking for more discussion on the issue!
PSA Software (Score:2, Informative)
allocPSA and GNU Enterprise (Score:2, Informative)
allocPSA: http://www.allocpsa.org/ [allocpsa.org]
screenshots: http://sourceforge.net/project/screenshots.php?gr
GNU Enterprise is another: http://www.gnuenterprise.org/ [gnuenterprise.org]
http://www.gnuenterprise.org/packages/ [gnuenterprise.org]
Re:VTiger (Score:2, Informative)
I am Richie from vtiger.
Yes, of late, the release has been very late by vtiger standards. This was done so that the quality issues are addressed. Earlier on, vtiger was more date-driven and hence had compromised on the quality and user-experiences. This time around, quality is the paramount factor in mind. Hence the extended time before we release.
The last release was on 30/10/2006. It has been 7 months now since the last release. The new release is due this month and will be primarily a bug-fix release.
Pertaining to the original discussion, I would agree with jimicus. Open Source is not a silver bullet. You will have to be very careful in what you want and how you would like to achieve the same. I would suggest Open Source since you will have multiple alternatives but at the same time, you have to be careful as to which horse you back even in the OS domain. Priorities change depending on the community response to the releases so what you want may or may not be in the next release.
Try and build modular plugins/extensions so that you can replace them with anything new that comes in. This way you will be uptodate and not be hampered by progresses. You will not be able to do this with Commercial products though.
Richie