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This profile was automatically generated using 22 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 22 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
Employment History
View...View all 22 references Web References
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1. AIIM E-DOC Magazine - Enterprise Content Management at Work!
www.edocmagazine.com/archives_ - [Cached]Published on: 7/22/2005 Last Visited: 7/22/2005
But Seth Brenzel, director of marketing for Atomz, argues that in spite of concerns over network viability, and even in the face of global economic difficulties, the economic advantages to outsourcing are simply too strong to ignore.
"A lot of organizations are fairly savvy about what core competencies they want to retain in-house," Brenzel says. -
2. Atomz Connection
search-uk.atomz.com/news/newsl - [Cached]Published on: 11/1/2003 Last Visited: 2/23/2006
Matthew Berk, Research Director at Jupiter Research, whose expertise includes content management, will present along with Seth Brenzel, Director of Marketing at Atomz. -
3. Web Hosting Industry News | Innovation, Uptime Transform Atomz From Search Firm to ASP
www.thewhir.com/features/atomz - [Cached]Published on: 1/28/2002 Last Visited: 6/14/2004
"We tend to get really good marks for keeping our applications up and running and available," says Seth Brenzel, Project Manager for Atomz. "That's a hallmark of what we do."
Since establishing itself as a leader in Web site searching, Atomz has moved beyond simply providing search functions and in to fully hosted Web content management solutions. The company now offers full content publishing services for Fortune 500 companies, as well as custom hosting services for enterprise clients. Brenzel says these services are particularly popular among media sites, because they allow clients to concentrate on what drives their success - writing. "Those kinds of organizations have been really re-focusing back on their core competencies, doing editorial content and not managing all this technology for their Web sites," he says.
In order to ensure maximum uptime and redundancy, Atomz maintains a presence at three different co-location facilities (two with Exodus Communications, now a part of Cable & Wireless, and one with AboveNet, now part of Metromedia Fiber Network) and is in the process of moving in to a fourth. Because the company co-locates its severs, allowing it almost complete control over its technical operations, Atomz can manage the hosting needs of its clients while at the same time ensuring that its own network is not burdened by client traffic. "[Customers] can host… in a secure area of our network outside of where our applications are," Brenzel says.
With a solid, enterprise-level infrastructure and customer base now in place, Brenzel says Atomz will adjust its corporate focus slightly. For example, the company has re-adjusted the guidelines of its "no-charge" search feature, a direct result of the company taking further aim at enterprise clients. "In order to really focus on serving their needs and be really clear about them as our customer, in the long term we can't continue to support 50-page Web sites," Brenzel says. The company is hoping that this new focus, combined with continued exposure through viral marketing channels, will be the formula for further success. "People talk," Brenzel says.

