In a company statement, Google today announced the launch of two new initiatives — Google Apps and Cloud services — which aim to help enterprises and start-ups further fuel its momentum in India
The company will cover the fees of Google Apps for any business locked into an enterprise agreement (EA) with another provider until its contract runs out. Google will also chip in on some of the deployment costs to set companies up for success with one of the Google for Work Partners .
Once the current EA is up, Google will offer a simple contract with no additional traps. According to estimates, this will help most businesses with basic EAs and no dependencies to potentially unlock savings of up to 70 per cent by switching to Google Apps for Work.
Bringing the power of the Google Cloud Platform to India’s start-up community, the tech major also announced its plan to offer 1,000 Indian start-ups with up to $20,000 each in free credits for Google Cloud services starting in 2016. This will help start-ups in India who are held back by a lack of computing to power, to build, deploy and scale the next big innovation on the web.
Speaking at the launch of these initiatives, Amit Singh, president, Google For Work, said: “With the second largest developer population in the world, India is poised to be home to the next generation of global software firms. We’re committed to partner these next gen companies and enterprises as a trusted provider of affordable, collaborative and easy to use productivity and cloud computing tools to help them succeed.
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“Over the last few years, we have gained tremendous momentum in helping companies go Google in India and we’re confident that with these new initiatives, we will further bring down the barriers for companies to make the switch to Google Apps”, he added.
Google already powers the IT and cloud computing of a range of Indian enterprises from well-known companies like Hero Motocorp and Bombay Dyeing to Indian-born multinationals like Welspun Group as well as the majority of leading start-ups in India.
Mohit Pande, country head, Google for Work India, said: “We are excited to work with our current and soon-to-be customers to continue building the future of work in India. With the Enterprise Agreement offer and Cloud Platform credits for startups, we hope to see Indian businesses continue to rise”.