An older (May 10) article on Meridian marketing of Snap Server:  << More than 93,000 NAS units shipped in 1998, up from about 58,000 units in 1997, according to Dataquest.
                    The San Jose, Calif.-based market-research firm forecasts that worldwide  spending on PC server storage and RAID will exceed $5 billion in 2000, up from $2 billion in 1996. The firm also projects that in 1999 more than 40 percent of the cost of a server will be storage-related.>>
  May 10, 1999, Issue: 841                   Section: Small Business
                    Meridian Beefing Up NAS Offerings -- New VAR program for                 Snap                   Herman Mehling
                    Scotts Valley, Calif. - Meridian Data Inc., manufacturer of the Snap Server, a                   network-attached storage (NAS) device for small and midsize companies, is rolling                   out a reseller program to drive sales of the product, and it also is introducing a                   new version of the Snap Server.
                    Resellers have been asking the vendor for months to support their efforts to                   educate small businesses about NAS, said Greg Swope, vice president of sales at                   Meridian, based here.
                    NAS is one of those concepts that needs a demonstration before a client                   understands the benefits of it, said Rebecca Lima, sales consultant at Intelli-Tech                   Inc., San Dimas, Calif. "We have one small business that was initially reluctant to                   part with almost $1,000 for a device it had never heard about. But once we demo'd                   the product, the company saw the value and has since bought a number of the                   units," she said.
                    "The expansion of this market makes it imperative for us to have a reseller                   program," said Swope. "Resellers are looking for demo units and strong incentives                   to sell the products. We think our program answers their needs."
                    The NAS market grew substantially over the past 12 months, said James Staten,                   senior industry analyst for the emerging server technologies worldwide program at                   Dataquest.
                    More than 93,000 NAS units shipped in 1998, up from about 58,000 units in 1997,                   according to Dataquest.
                    The San Jose, Calif.-based market-research firm forecasts that worldwide                   spending on PC server storage and RAID will exceed $5 billion in 2000, up from                   $2 billion in 1996. The firm also projects that in 1999 more than 40 percent of the                   cost of a server will be storage-related.
                    Hoping to tap into the explosive growth, Meridian is offering resellers discounted                   pricing on Snap Server, prequalified sales leads, deep discounts for on-site demo                   units and priority sales and tech support, said Swope.
                    "Resellers will get 50 percent off a demo unit, and if they sell five units of the Snap                   Server per month for three months, Meridian will give them the demo free," he                   said.
                    To sweeten the deal even more, Meridian will give partners a 7 percent discount                   on top of the prices they get from distributors Ingram Micro Inc. and Tech Data                   Corp., he said.
                    The Snap Server was designed to address the growing needs of small and midsize                   networks to store E-mail, CAD files, graphics files, and other large files that can                   consume 100 Mbytes or more.
                    While the product has broad appeal for the small-business market, Meridian                   identifies CAD, graphics, legal and publishing as important verticals.
                    Unlike traditional storage devices that involve hours of installation, the Snap Server                   attaches to a network in a few easy steps, said Swope.
                    "All a user or reseller has to do is plug one end of the server into an electrical                   outlet, plug the other end into a network Ethernet port, flip the switch, and the                   Snap Server is up and running," he said. "There's no configuring, no SCSI ID or                   cables needed, and no server downtime because it doesn't connect to a file server."
                    The product is preconfigured for Windows NT, Novell NetWare and Unix-based                   networks. It supports any existing Windows-based network client, and others                   such as OS/2, LAN Manager and Unix workstations. It requires no client                   software, no software to load on a network file server and no configuration                   changes to make on a file server.
                    The latest Snap Server, scheduled for availability at the end of May, offers 32                   Gbytes of instant network storage and runs three times as fast as previous models,                   said Jeff Hill, Meridian's vice president of product marketing.
                    The Snap Server also is available in 8-Gbyte and 16-Gbyte models.
                    The new model has a suggested price of $2,495. The 8-Gbyte and 16-Gbyte                   models have suggested prices of $995 and $1,795, respectively.
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