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Following the progression of its flagship product Akshar
Naveen to the Linux platform, Artech Infosystems (erstwhile Softek) is seeking
tie-ups with systems integrators to further its reach among government and
industrial sectors. Said Yogendra Tripathi, Country Head and Senior VP, Artech
India, "Since Akshar Naveen is a very niche product, we will join forces
only with those SIs who have a strong hold in the government sector. This will
lend the much-needed thrush to our product."
The company first unveiled Akshar Naveen office suite in four
Indian languages - Hindi, Bangla, Punjabi and Gujarati, in July last year. It
has received good acceptance among government institutions, which rely on native
and bilingual language computing. With the computerization of government
offices, especially since e-governance is happening in full swing, this vertical
has emerged as the prominent purchaser IT products. "We want to tap this
expanding vertical through the concerted efforts of our marketing team and SI
partners," Tripathi added.
It is noteworthy that Artech has earlier taken on board
reseller partners to market Akshar Naveen but the relationship has not proved
beneficial for the vendor. Giving a judicious reply on this fact Harinder Singh,
Senior Manager-Products and Communications quipped, "Basically Akshar
Naveen is not a push product that would require box pushing agents. Still we
have been able to get encouraging business through reseller partners that we
appointed last year. But as per the figures gathered on direct versus channel
business, we have reworked our channel sales policy."
In addition to channel appointments, Artech is equally
bullish over instituting relationships with hardware vendors, who can bundle
Akshar Naveen with their hardware offerings. "The urge to migrate Akshar
Naveen on Linux has emerged from the OS' widespread popularity. Almost 25% to
30% of our customers have migrated to Linux, which is a large base,"
informed Tripathi.
Rajeev Malik, Chief Technology Officer at Artech India
informed, "The only objective behind transferring it to Linux is to
facilitate multilingual computing for Linux customers as well."
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