Yes it might be small simply because services we offer are realistic and our focus is customer satisfaction. With the recent acquisition of query foundry, services now are sure to come in more solid than ever. We could grow dirty big if we had packages that had 5GB RAM 1000TB bandwidth and advertised it to come with 150 years of staff experience all for $5 but we care for our clients and we didnt choose to go that way.FrapHost's annual revenue was $17K at the time of the acquisition. That's all that needs to be said to illustrate my point.
You're forgetting some key things.Not trying to cause drama or anything but all of their brands are microscopically small (proven fact) except for their two primary brands.
I honestly don't see the point in keeping the brands independent rather than merging them, other than making Query Foundry look like RLT or something. I see right through it though, they're just gathering up a cluster of brands nobody uses in order to look bigger.
STFU. You try to act like you're a massive company, you're not. Alex didn't have a massive amount of clients, but he didn't have a small amount of clients either, I know because I worked with him a while back. I would probably even say he has more nodes than your real nodes (not slabbed ones).Not trying to cause drama or anything but all of their brands are microscopically small (proven fact) except for their two primary brands.
I honestly don't see the point in keeping the brands independent rather than merging them, other than making Query Foundry look like RLT or something. I see right through it though, they're just gathering up a cluster of brands nobody uses in order to look bigger.
The annual income of the average hosting company on here is our average monthly income.Revenue means sod all, profit is the bottom line. If you turn over 17k and make a profit of 10k, that's great. Turning over 500k and making 1k profit doesn't make you bigger, just stupid.
Again showing your ignorance. You know nothing about the average anything, never mind average hosting company. You're also the individual who oversells to the 300th degree to make ends meet on servers you're already renting at an unsustainable rate from your 'provider'. You're mistaken in your methods too. It's not about whatever it takes - that's where people like you fail and end up having to post on forums skating other companies in posts that have nothing to do with you.The annual income of the average hosting company on here is our average monthly income.
At the end of the day, what matters is that you make money in a legal fashion and that you do whatever it takes to make it, whether it be to satisfy your client base, offer bulk resources for cheap, offer promotions, whatever -- but everyone knows what matters at the end of the day and that's not how many brands you have.
The annual income of the average hosting company on here is our average monthly income.
End of story.I'm not really here to say that GVH is better than X company and makes Y more than this company -- I'm not Chris.
Nah. He's spending all the money on Part-Time VP'sHope the monthly income any high school student would brag about in the low end vps market is going to a savings account. Otherwise it'll be an excellent dinner conversation piece after community college.
"Remember that time I had money?"
It's just whatever that makes sense. It doesn't matter large or small. What adds financial value is good. Business is business. Come back when you purchased Comcast?I'm sorry if my input offended anyone because that's certainly wasn't what I was trying to do. I'm trying to understand QF's reasoning behind buying small brands.