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What about all the other, smaller clients? What if your organization is 25 people and not 2,500 people? How do you afford LAN's, WAN's, plus network resource people, plus line costs and how do you deal with service packages raining from the sky from providers you've never heard of before? From another perspective, let's consider if you are a landlord of a commercial office building with 1,000 people as tenants. How do you plan to respond when you are besieged with calls from service providers who all want access through your building, from the basement to the individual floors, to get to your tenants? CapabilitiesEnter MENATELs "Smart" Building solution. Our approach is simple. We put communications systems in place to service all occupants as if they were part of the same large organization. And then we partition these services and sell access on a pay-as-you-use basis. By aggregating the requirements of all the tenants in a commercial office tower, we can provide complete telecommunications services cost effectively. For the landlord we take care of his communication infrastructure and we work with the various service providers to ensure they have a framework for access to the building occupants. Tenants win. Landlords win. Key Benefits if You are a TenantIf your company is located in a building where we operate, you have these benefits:
Our large clients can afford to provide these services cost effectively because of a simple economic theory Economies of Scale. They leverage their significant purchasing power to get better deals, and they have the user base and budget to justify dedicated support resources. Range of Services
We help large clients get the best communication resources available, because they demand top quality of service. Large organizations have economies of scale working vastly to their advantage. The leverage their significant purchasing power to get better telecommunication service packages from providers, and they have the user base to justify dedicated support resources. What about all the other, smaller clients? What if your organization is 25 people and not 2,500 people? How do you afford LAN's, WAN's, plus network resource people, plus line costs and how do you deal with service packages raining from the sky from providers you've never heard of before? From another perspective, let's consider if you are a landlord of a commercial office building with 1,000 people as tenants. How do you plan to respond when you are besieged with calls from service providers who all want access through your building, from the basement to the individual floors, to get to your tenants? Send mail to webmaster@menatel.ca with questions or comments about this web site.
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