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Let's run the numbers!
Your a small business with 10 employees. You've made
the mistake of listing each and every single one of your
employee's email addresses on your "contact" page.
Wow, now each one of your employees are getting 200+ spams
a day.
Your paying your employees by the hour. How much
time in an average day are you paying your employees to
"self filter" their own spam/viruses? $1.00?
$2.00? more? It's a soft number. You really
can't "quantify" it but you "know" your paying for it
aren't you?
If you paid all 10 of your employees the same amount,
10.00/hour you'd be paying 100.00/hour for all your
employees. TIME is valuable? If each of your
10 employees had to spend just 1 minute of "each" hour to
"self filter" their own spam, it would cost you "each"
hour: $.80 (let's not mention the taxes and
insurances either!). In an eight hour day, you would
have spent $6.40. That's $6.40/day!! In a
years time, assuming 50 weeks employment and 5 day work
week (2000hours) - $1920 per year just to FIGHT SPAM!!
Now, is Stormer Anti Spam worth it for your small
business?
Figure Stormer will be your employee. Your very
generous and you give me 4 weeks paid vacation a year and
2 weeks sick leave. (which I always take). I work 40
hour weeks. I will be working for 50 weeks or 2000
hours in a given year.
If you have 10 employees and your paying 24.00/year/pop3
account or
240.00/year for all your employees emails to be
filtered... take 240 and divide it by 2000.
You'd be paying Stormer 0.12cents an hour to filter all
your employee's email for you every hour. (but I'd
really be doing it 24/7/365).
You can see, it's a LOT less to pay 0.12cents an "hour"
verses paying all your employees to "self filter" their
own email every hour for just "1 minute". When you
compare annual cost to pay Stormer, verses paying your
employees to self filter, the savings are IMPRESSIVE.
Do we even have to mention the cost of getting a virus on
a single computer? What if that computer lost all
it's data. You'd have all that time to take the
computer down to a computer store, pay them by the "hour"
to fix it. Or, if you have an internal IT person to
fix it, you'd be paying him valuable time to fix a
computer verses working on other things needing attention.
The math adds up!
Here's the order
form!
  



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