10 Reasons Your Small Business Should Run on Macs
Posted 02/24/2009 at 5:36am
| by Jason Whong

Photo by Matthew Carden
The Macintosh, a computer that for over two decades has been the choice of creative professionals, is being adopted by more small businesses, a market segment that has traditionally been dominated by computers running Microsoft Windows. Apple has tried off and on since 1985 to pitch the Mac as a business machine, and the Macs of today are easily the most business-capable computers Apple has ever shipped.
If you’re a business owner or thinking of becoming one, you may be surprised by how useful a Mac can be and how it can save your company money in the long run. We’ve talked to business owners, scoured the Internet, and come up with the top ten reasons your small business should switch to Mac.
INDUSTRIAL DESIGN
Apple’s
reputation for good hardware design owes a lot to what its designers
have done in the last 10 years. In 1998, the eye-catching curvy shape
of the iMac helped forge a whimsical identity for the Mac, but its
Bondi blue color and bulbous body didn’t complement every office’s
décor. These days, the company’s designers are working with anodized
aluminum casings with black or white accents that go with just about
anything. Whether your desk surface is cherry, plum, or an unfinished
plywood sheet, a new Mac will look great on it.
Having Macs in
your office or shop sends a signal about your company’s philosophy: You
understand good design and appreciate quality and simplicity. It could
also signify how “with it” your company is, how creatively your
employees think, or even how intelligently you manage the business.
Because
most of your customers likely use Windows PCs at home and work, the Mac
they see in your office will make an impression. Then, every time they
see an Apple advertisement, there’s a chance they’ll think of you.
iLIFE’S SUPRISING BUSINESS USES
Every
Mac comes with iLife, Apple’s software for working with photos, music,
video, and webpages, as well as iTunes and iCal. Just because most
people use these apps in their homes doesn’t mean you can’t use them
for work.
iTunes can do more than just play music in your office;
it’s also a great general-purpose audio sequencer, which you can use to
shape the soundscape of your office or store. You can even insert
marketing messages between music tracks. If your phone system lets you
connect a CD player or other audio source for people to listen to while
they’re on hold, you can use iTunes to burn CDs with playlists that set
the right tone or mood for your business. Be sure to include a “thanks
for holding” message between songs, to keep customers on the line.
You
can also use iPhoto as a still-image sequencer. Perhaps your business
won’t benefit from a slide show, but it might benefit from a slide show
with helpful information on a continuous loop. If your company is
undercapitalized, you can use iPhoto as presentation software, using
the arrow keys to change slides manually.
GarageBand isn’t just
an audio editor. You can use its recording capabilities to create those
marketing messages for the iTunes playlist or the customer-service
message for the hold CD. Use the provided royalty-free audio loops to
make music underneath your message, and if you time it right, you’ll
have a perfect thirty-second cut to use as a radio advertisement.
With
iWeb, you can build a simple website from professionally designed theme
templates. iMovie lends itself to making videos to attract more
customers over the Internet or ad spots for television. iCal can help
you make schedules for your employees and keep track of appointments.

COMPANY: Intermedia, Ltd. EMPLOYEES: 2 LOCATION: Nagano, Japan

Choosing
the Mac was a no-brainer for Intermedia, a provider of Japanese-English
translation services to mostly Japanese clientele. “A well-configured
Mac becomes a seamless extension of your mind, in a way that no other
combination of software and hardware can,” says Intermedia owner Brian
Rafter. “That makes work more productive, less stressful, and a whole
lot more fun.”
The Mac has long been a leader in
multiple-display setups, and Intermedia takes advantage of this ability
with a 23-inch Apple Cinema Display as its main monitor, flanked by two
20-inch Apple Cinema Displays. A fourth display is also within view.
Typically, Rafter keeps the previous year’s version of a document in
Japanese and English on the left monitor, the current year’s versions
appear in the main screen, and reference documents are visible with a
glance to the right.
Rafter uses Mac OS X’s Spaces feature,
which enables multiple workspaces for each display, to switch
seamlessly from one project to another. Since he juggles anywhere from
five to six projects at a time, each project will have its own
workspace, available instantly.
When Intermedia’s clients
required it, Rafter used to translate on Windows PCs. Since switching
to the Mac, his translation word count per day has gone up by about 25
percent, which gave him more time to craft definitions like “the
difference in the radii of the arcs traced by the front and rear inner
wheels of a turning car” to represent the Japanese nairinsa, an obscure
word that pops up every now and then.

YOU CAN RUN WINDOWS APPS IF NECESSARY
It’s
difficult to justify buying a Mac to run software for Microsoft
Windows, but that’s not the reason the compatibility factor makes this
list. Rather, it’s knowing that your investment in Mac hardware won’t
prevent you from using Windows software in the future--if you ever need
to--that makes good sense. You can control the processes in your
office, so you’ll run Mac software in-house. You can’t control the
processes of other organizations, some of which may require
compatibility with Windows.
While a Mac isn’t capable of running
Windows apps out of the box, there are a number of options available
that are cheaper than running out and buying a Windows-based computer.
Apple’s Boot Camp software, part of Mac OS X Leopard, enables you to
install your copy of Windows onto the Mac and lets you choose which
operating system you’ll boot into.
If you prefer to use Windows
programs without rebooting, you can try VMware Fusion ($79.99,
www.vmware.com) or Parallels Desktop ($79.99, www.parallels.com), both
of which require a copy of Windows. If you don’t have Windows, try
CodeWeavers CrossOver ($39.95, www.codeweavers.com/), though it doesn’t
run as many programs as the other two.
RETURN ON INVESTMENT
Corporations
study the “total cost of ownership” of their technology to decide
whether a computer system is worth purchasing. Businesses of all sizes
find that the Mac platform can save money over time, despite the higher
price tag associated with the initial purchase.
The Mac’s
greatest ally in calculating cost of ownership is the value of time.
Business owners say their Macs experience fewer crashes and other
problems than PCs running Windows, translating to less lost work and
fewer visits from the IT folks. They also tend to keep Macs in service
longer than they keep PCs running.
The time calculation works
both ways: You’ll have to place a value on retraining employees on the
new operating system and lost time and increased agitation due to
slightly different keyboard layouts and a different OS. You’ll also
need to budget for Mac versions of the software you plan to run. (Of
course, you would probably also have some retraining and software costs
upgrading from XP to Vista if you stuck with Windows.) If you’re
starting a new business, you can skip the costs associated with
switching.

COMPANY: Stevens MacPhail, P.A. EMPLOYEES: 4 LOCATION: Spartanburg, South Carolina

Family-law
firm Stevens MacPhail switched to a Mac platform in August 2005. “I got
tired of wasting time and money dealing with one problem after another
with our PCs and network,” says Ben Stevens, one of the company’s two
attorneys. “It seemed that we were having at least one issue a week
that was affecting our ability to most effectively represent our
clients, and that was not acceptable.”
Since the switch, the
company’s tech-support costs were reduced to almost nothing. (The
company still uses a Windows server that requires troubleshooting.)
Stevens reports 100 percent uptime on the company’s Macs. He also says
his employees are happier: “Anything that can be done on a PC can be
done on a Mac, and usually faster, better, and more enjoyably,” he says.
The
company uses each of the apps in iWork. Stevens is especially fond of
Keynote for his presentations. Rocket Matter ($50/month), a Web-based app, is the company’s choice for case
management. Stevens MacPhail uses a combination of Parallels Desktop
and Microsoft Remote Desktop Connection to run two Windows apps:
QuickBooks (because the Windows version has better payroll features
than the Mac version, they say), and South Carolina’s child-support
calculator, which has no Mac version.
Stevens uses a MacBook
Air and his partner uses a 15-inch PowerBook from 2005 that he likes
too much to upgrade. The company’s two legal assistants use 20-inch
iMacs. “We often have clients and other visitors to our office comment
on how ‘pretty’ their computers are,” says Stevens, who also publishes
a legal Mac-tech blog, themaclawyer.com.

SECURITYPart
of the reason businesses report more uptime with the Mac is because of
the Mac’s built-in security features that keep viruses and malware at
bay. A Mac won’t run Windows software right out of the box, so most of
the malware lurking on the Internet won’t harm a Mac. The same goes
with viruses that affect Windows users: With no version of Windows to
run on, a virus will sit unused, unable to replicate itself.
Because viruses and malware are not a serious threat on Mac OS
X yet, attackers have to fool unsuspecting Mac users into installing
malware themselves. Apple’s Safari, Mail, and iChat software all notice
when downloads contain applications, and tell Leopard to warn you the
first time you open the software, hopefully thwarting the security
breach.
The sunny state of Mac security may not last forever, of
course: As more people connect their Macs to the Internet, attackers
may take more of an interest in learning new ways to compromise them.
Even so, experts have been saying this over the last decade, but the
threats still haven’t shown up in large numbers.