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by patio11
4367 days ago
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I wasn't going to mention it, but since you asked, my answer when somebody asks this for AR on the publicly available plans is: "I have been in business since 2006. AR has been my main product focus since 2010. I don't have any current plans of exiting the business any time soon. At the same time, I'm a one-man operation. If you were to say you feel less sure that I'm going to be around than $COMPETITOR, I'd say you're probably right. I'd also say that you can always get me to answer your email and their CEO wouldn't even know much less care that you exist. Your call." ($COMPETITOR is a well-known company in the space with eight figures in revenue whose minimum buy-in is close to the maximum I've ever charged a client.) If you were on one of the non-publicly-available plans, you'd get language similar to "Vendor agrees to provide services as per the attached Statement of Work for the Contract Term as specified in the attached Statement of Work." That means exactly what it and related contractual terms say. It isn't like continuity of service is something that e.g. hospital systems suddenly realized they needed in 2004. They quite literally have similar contractual guarantees written in their contract for garbage disposal. |
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Again, I don't really want to focus on Appointment Reminder specifically because obviously it's not as if you're running the only service in the world that does this, but it does make a good example here. Objectively, almost every major claim on the Appointment Reminder home page -- meaning the things that really matter to a prospective customer, including literally the entire benefit someone would get from signing up to use the service -- is undermined by the wording in the Terms of Service.
It may be true that if someone asks explicitly then you give them an honest answer about your situation. I've certainly no reason to doubt you do. On the other hand, does an average small business outside the start-up world actually ask? I can't imagine anyone working the reception desk at my dentist or optician is going to be sufficiently aware of the legal and business environment to consider that a service advertised as Appointment Reminder is might not actually promise to do anything of value at all.
At this point, AR is becoming a bad example, simply because by its nature it falls into the category I described as being convenient but not critical. (No slight is intended by this comment, but I imagine any business that has so many missed appointments that it would be in serious trouble without AR has bigger problems than anything we're discussing here.) However, if we were talking about a service that hosted the professional's calendar of appointments, or their CRM database, or their payment system, and these services were known to be at significant risk of disappearing overnight, how many other small businesses would really sign up to use them?