Web Africa has revamped its Business Uncapped offering, leveraging the added capacity it has built into its network, which increased by 8% in the last week alone, delivering a superior service at prices that make it one of the most compelling business Internet access offerings on the market.
The new Business Uncapped offering has been designed around the user who is looking for a business solution that is structured to prioritise business-critical traffic simply and efficiently.
“South African business owners are becoming a lot more demanding of their service providers, and rightly so. Business is all happening in real-time, whether it's delivering voice over the network or taking part in real-time trading. Making sure your business can guarantee quality connectivity should be the first priority for the serious business owner,” explains Tim Wyatt-Gunning, CEO of Web Africa.
The Business Uncapped product offers Uncapped ADSL from R299 per month, and now includes, at no extra cost, a .co.za domain, a Web hosting package with unlimited traffic, and a R400 Google AdWords voucher. In addition, each Business Uncapped subscriber has access to Expert Support in which service queries are handled by only the most experienced call centre agents.
Web Africa business customers' ADSL usage is prioritised on its network, meaning super-fast, stable connectivity for business-critical applications. The transparent Acceptable Usage Policy means business owners get to see exactly how they are consuming bandwidth and manage their usage to ensure optimal speeds at all times. Web Africa has set itself apart from any other ISP in this regard and business users have openly welcomed the systems.
“While the prices speak for themselves, we believe the quality of the user experience is the real benefit for our business community. Business owners are realising that you get what you pay for. In this instance we are delivering quality connectivity, premium support, complete control at international standards - the business-class lounge, without any pretention,” Wyatt-Gunning concludes.
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