The virtual business: Doing deals in your pyjamas

By Fiona Graham Technology of business reporter, BBC News

Man using laptop in Bryant Park, NYC Blue sky thinking: Running a virtual

business could mean that when you have an internet connection, you're at work

Sitting at your office desk, squinting in the direction of the distant window

as you work through the post-lunch slump, do you dream of starting your own

business and being your own boss?

But then you think of the cost of starting your own business - the cost of

office space, IT infrastructure, staff, and realise you just can't afford it.

Or can you?

Running a business from home is nothing new. But technology such as the

internet and cloud computing is increasingly providing easily-shared lower-cost

software options for start-up firms. Cheap internet telephony services let you

stay in touch with people half a world away.

Friends Jamie Waldegrave and Chris Huey met at university in Durham before

taking jobs in the financial services industry.

In October they quit their jobs and decided to start their own business.

TipToken is a group-buying website, and has been live for just three months.

So far uptake has been promising, says Mr Waldegrave.

"We've been really pleased with the response," he says.

"It takes time to grow, but the numbers are moving in the right direction,

we're getting more and more traffic to the site and more sales, which is really

nice."

Chris Huey (left) and Jamie Waldegrave Chris Huey (left) and Jamie Waldegrave

say operating virtually was their only option

The partners are the only full-time employees of the company. For any other

work that needs to be done they use remote freelancers thousands of miles away,

as they don't need full-time staff.

The business is web-based. Skype lets them talk to their developers and

designers in India, and for all other IT needs they rely on cloud-based

services accessible from anywhere, so they can share data with staff based

anywhere in the world.

The self-funded operation started on a shoestring budget, and Mr Waldegrave

says working as a virtual company is the only reason they exist.

"The cost of taking on in-house design staff and development, or keeping a

local company on retainer would be impossible," he says.

"We don't have to upgrade to bigger offices, and we don't have to worry about

employment law. That would have slowed us down a lot. We can do things quicker

and faster."

Taken on trust

Mr Waldegrave says that building a relationship with remote workers you can

trust is vital.

"The ones we started out with, they were no good, didn't get the work done and

it was a real problem. We had to go through the process of getting the deposit

we'd paid back and that took a lot of time."

"We do a lot of research on someone before we take them on, and try not to have

too many different people."

Peopleperhour.com screenshot The Peopleperhour.com website lets prospective

employers see how freelancers have been rated

One of the ways TipToken tries to minimise problems is by using sites such as

PeoplePerHour.com, an online marketplace for remote workers.

The company says they've seen a growth in registered users from 50,000 to

136,000 across 150 countries on the back of the virtual business trend.

Chief executive Xenios Thrasyvoulou says the company focuses on providing

talent, rather than outsourcing menial tasks.

"They're no less talented than those who are part of your core. It's just that

you don't need an SEO [search engine optimisation] person fulltime, and you

can't afford it.

"But you want someone to be on your instant messenger, to be able to call on a

Saturday and get an answer, in the same way as an employee anywhere in the

world."

So how far can you take the virtual company? Mr Thrasyvoulou thinks there are

limits.

Start Quote

Working virtually in the beginning meant that we've just worked a bit more

intelligently

End Quote Jack Waley-Cohen Lingo24

"It's a fallacy that you can be 100% virtual, it gets to the point where it

gets quite draining on the one person that's the owner. You need a core to grow

with."

Lingo24's operations director Jack Waley-Cohen agrees. The translation company

started as a virtual company. They now have 130 staff spread over four

continents.

"Before we got our first office location I was convinced we could carry on

being pretty virtual, but I genuinely think there comes a point where you do

need people together. Not necessarily all the time, but some of the time."

Mr Waley-Cohen says what they have is a "hybrid" situation - a core physical

presence in small offices, with the majority of staff working remotely. He

thinks that starting virtually had huge benefits.

"Working virtually in the beginning meant that we've just worked a bit more

intelligently," he says.

"We've developed all our systems to give us flexibility you won't have in an

office. And as a growing business cost is a major consideration. Even if you

have a small team in an office it adds to the overheads."

The company uses a lot of free or publicly available IT tools, including Skype,

Google Apps for business, Dropbox and Yammer.

Alone in a crowd

There are disadvantages. Having staff working in isolation, even with a wealth

of modern connectivity tools, creates its own problems.

Mr Waley-Cohen says keeping everyone in the loop can be difficult - the company

now uses a daily newsletter to keep staff connected.

Textappeal is another company working to a hybrid virtual model.

Founded originally in Paris, the company does transcreation - translation for

the advertising and marketing industries. This requires more than just straight

language skills, it's about ensuring that advertising and branding translates

culturally.

Clients have included a worldwide hotel group. When this hotel firm translated

its slogan into Chinese characters, they found later it also meant pig's tail,

leading them to engage Textappeal's services.

Cost Coffee Costa Coffee uses Textappeal to make sure they don't make a

cultural faux pas

They now work in 151 markets with global brands such as Nikon, Swarovski, and

Nokia's luxury mobile brand Vertu.

Co-founder Elliot Polak says their remote workers can feel isolated at times.

"The idea that everyone can work from their home is a nice idea, but most

people want to be with other people - it's more stimulating and they come up

with better ideas."

The company says it values its remote workers and works hard to help them feel

like part of the team, flying their top people in to head office to spend time

with each other and the team.

In the 12 years Mr Polak has been in business he has seen a seismic shift in

the technology available.

"It's hard to believe we were using fax machines. We could fax each other and

find people in different markets who could do these things.

"Over the last two years people have realised that you don't really need

offices - you just need talented people and thanks to technology you can

connect people up."

Using talented people who have been through a rigorous testing process, but who

are local to the countries the brands are breaking into, gives Textappeal the

edge, Mr Polak believes.

Pyjama party

For the budding virtual business owner it doesn't have to stop there. If you'd

rather your new venture had a more prestigious address than your bedroom, there

are companies that can provide you with a postal address and redirection

service, telephone answering service, and even meeting rooms when you're in

town.

Executive Offices is one of those companies, and their chief executive officer

is John Drover. The company has seen huge growth in virtual businesses using

their services.

"It allows people working form home to punch above their weight. It's great to

work from home but 18 Acacia Avenue doesn't have quite the ring of 23 Berkeley

Square."

Business meeting taking place in Second Life Business meeting taking place in

Second Life

And if you want to be truly virtual, or just take a meeting while still in your

pyjamas, you could join those using the services of virtual world Second Life.

Adam Nelson, executive director at Linden Labs, the company behind Second Life,

says that hundreds of companies use Second Life to arrange meetings,

conferences with remote workers, training, 3D rapid prototyping, and more.

"Businesses can purchase their own virtual spaces, and build or buy the 3D

content and applications that suit their specific needs," Mr Nelson says.

"Many choose to work with a company in our Solution Provider program, qualified

experts in creating content and experiences in Second Life.

"Alternately, businesses can choose to use facilities in Second Life provided

by third parties - for example, there are several full-service conferencing

facilities available."

IBM has held a global conference in Second Life, Northrop Grumman used it for

training people to use a bomb disposal robot, and the Children's Memorial

Hospital in Chicago used it for a disaster preparedness simulation.

Virtually there

This is just the beginning, according to Milind Govekar of technology analysts

Gartner.

"For years we've been talking about globalisation but we didn't really have the

tools to manage that. Now we do."

He says the driver behind the acceleration in uptake over the last few years is

undoubtedly cloud computing.

"If I've got an idea and I want to do something, it's cheap as chips, as well

as the agility it gives me in terms of trying it out."

"It's a generational thing as well. The next generation coming to work are very

comfortable with virtual entities, they are digital natives, they've grown up

with computers."