Gil Heiman Hello America, here we come!

April 10th, 2007 by Gil Heiman

After a remarkable debut in Europe, Collanos is shifting gears to accelerate user growth and presence in the U.S. market with Franco Dal Molin, our founder, steering the U.S. ship.

We are seeing rapid growth in our U.S. user-base thanks to an unserved market of teams seeking an easy-to-use, peer-to-peer team workspace solution and the wonderful world of web search. Google us to see for yourself! We have also teamed up with one of the most creative PR agencies in Silicon Valley, PR 2.0, which couples nicely with our viral marketing activities.

Over the last few months and in the coming months, our team will be actively present at various events taking place in the Bay Area. We already presented our student friendly solution at UC Berkeley’s Haas MBA VCIC event, did a live webcast from Apple HQ to the MacLearning.org audience of our Mac friendly virtual team workspaces, showcased Collanos at the March SF New Tech Meetup, won a Sun Fire server at the STIRR Mixer event in Palo Alto and got our photo taken at the SFBeta and SFWIN events last week. For those of you who bump into us repeatedly (e.g. Stowe Boyd, Rafe Needleman, Nick Gonzalez, Brian Solis) hope we don’t tire you out too soon. We promise to provide you with the latest Collanos user anecdotes (See the latest Collanos Ambassador to Nicaragua) and a constant reminder of why it is so important to think out of the inbox!

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One Response to “Hello America, here we come!”

  1. Andy Wong Says:

    In the overview page at http://www.collanos.com/m1/en/solutions/overview, the protection of privacy is put at the second last item. Like many computer users who have been searching online collaboration tools, I am cautious about privacy of myself and my clients.

    Though there are already some offering encryption of data storing on the server of the service provider, storing sensitive data on someone else’s server make me feel uneasy.

    I think what make Collanos outstanding is about P2P and encryption. Such decentralized solution is what I have been looking for.

    Free or not free is not my concern. Free is good for freelancers and small businesses. I feel comfortable to pay some bonus services.

    I would suggest the editor of the web would put the mentioned item at a significant place.

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