|
Revas |
|
Is Revas outsourcing, SaaS and other services combined?
|
0 |
Mar 29 2007, 7:18 AM EDT by
Revas |
|
|
Thread started: Mar 29 2007, 7:18 AM EDT
Watch
Revas is not that easy to pigeon hole – our approach is to tailor the Revas outsourced accounting model to each client’s requirements within a range of given parameters. Different clients will require and take different levels of service. Having said that, Revas can:
•provide the reassurance of SaaS, no hardware or maintenance issues, no software licences or upgrades to worry about
•provide an outsourced solution to all accounting and tax compliance commitments including VAT & payroll
•provide our clients access to additional expertise on tap
•be accessed from anywhere in the world from any PC or MAC with Broadband Internet access.
At present Revas is enabled via Terminal Services for remote access to the core accounting applications and Crystal Reports for online reporting. Clients accessing our hosted service do so via Terminal Services. We have used Citrix to gain access to client-hosted systems. Revas need not be based around any particular accounting software although where we host the service we use Access Dimensions. Our intention was never to reinvent the wheel hence we do use off the shelf packages.
We tailor each set up to each client – some clients may want POP, others the project costing module, etc – we spend time with each client developing their desired management reporting pack, which we currently deliver via Crystal Reports.
out of
found this valuable.
Do you find this valuable?
|
|
|
|
Revas: Response to AW readers
|
0 |
Mar 29 2007, 7:16 AM EDT by
|
|
|
Thread started: Mar 29 2007, 7:16 AM EDT
Watch
Revas™ is the brand name for Baker Tilly’s online accounting service; it is also the brand name for the other online services offered by Baker Tilly, including online Company Secretarial Services.
Services that are currently provided by Revas are:
• Transaction processing (where required)
• Multi currency bank and cash reconciliations
• Project costing
• Payroll (from regional Baker Tilly payroll bureaux)
• Expense claim processing
• VAT returns (completion on behalf of clients)
• Purchase order processing
• Supplier payments
• Control account reconciliations
• Intercompany transactions
• Preparation of management accounts
• Preparation of other bespoke reports
• Full integration with existing client systems where appropriate
• Compliance work from local Baker Tilly office
• Ongoing advisory, strategic planning, consultancy and any other value added service again from the local Baker Tilly office.
out of
found this valuable.
Do you find this valuable?
|
|
|
|
The financial software as a service manifesto - reposted
|
1 |
Feb 27 2007, 8:17 AM EST by
|
|
|
Thread started: Feb 27 2007, 7:52 AM EST
Watch
out of
found this valuable.
Do you find this valuable?
Show Last Reply
|
|
Last Reply:
RE: The financial software as a service manifesto - reposted
By: ,
Feb 27 2007, 8:17 AM EST
You've completely confused me.... I can find you comment by URL... don't understand where it went and how. In any case, I intended you to post the brief in to the main wiki page. These comments are useful to track conversations around the wiki pages, but not so good for the contente itself. We'll put real content in wiki pages, and only use comments for dialogue around the issues.
out of
found this valuable.
Do you find this valuable?
|
|
|
jstokdyk |
|
Is this really the right place to write a collaborative article?
|
3 |
Feb 27 2007, 7:48 AM EST by
jstokdyk |
|
|
Thread started: Feb 27 2007, 6:04 AM EST
Watch
David, this looks like another debating thread - remember, what I want from this group is a well argued ARTICLE/opinion piece. A little old fashioned, I know, but busy readers appreciate the effort people put in to organise content and concepts for them.
out of
found this valuable.
Do you find this valuable?
|
|
|
|
The profession needs to catch up
|
2 |
Feb 27 2007, 6:37 AM EST by
|
|
|
Thread started: Feb 27 2007, 5:35 AM EST
Watch
Two separate things here. The Revas article and "Don't be frightened of SaaS". On the latter, the profession as well as the the SME/SMB community needs to catch up with the current options. The debate may have moved on to services in the web 2.0 blogosphere, but the rest of the business community need a better basic understanding to compare and contrast what is being ofered by the likes of Sage or Baker Tilly compared to Salesforce or Winweb or Twinfield. We also have hybrid offerings coming out from the major ERP suppliers like SAP and Microsoft. In that context SaaS is very definitely not redundant.
On Revas - They've just confused you, me, John Clough and Alastair Harris - so the average practioner might just be confused too. It's up to them to respond to our questions and comments, and very illuminating that we have a deafening silence.
out of
found this valuable.
Do you find this valuable?
Show Last Reply
|
|
Last Reply:
RE: The profession needs to catch up
By: ,
Feb 27 2007, 6:37 AM EST
Excellent - it's a shame they need some prompting... they should have been watching the comments on AW and responding straight away.
out of
found this valuable.
Do you find this valuable?
|
|
|
|
|
SaaS is so 2006
|
1 |
Feb 27 2007, 5:37 AM EST by
|
|
|
Thread started: Feb 27 2007, 4:23 AM EST
Watch
I said at AW's site that for me, the expression SaaS is redundant. What I mean is the debate has moved on. The software element is assumed in my mind because the innovations I see that matter are all coming from vendors offering an on-demand approach. Therefore, now is the right time to be considering the service element. I agree there is confusion from the title but in this case there was such a huge disconnect. I actually don't know what Revas is offering. That's my earlier point and I would prefer to see an explanation from the post author.
1
out of
1 found this valuable.
Do you find this valuable?
Do you?
Show Last Reply
|
|
Last Reply:
RE: SaaS is so 2006
By: ,
Feb 27 2007, 5:37 AM EST
Oops - getting used to Wetpaint. Should have posted the comment above as a reply here.
out of
found this valuable.
Do you find this valuable?
|
|