{"id":1560,"date":"2010-03-13T21:33:10","date_gmt":"2010-03-14T04:33:10","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.bspcn.com\/2010\/03\/13\/top-10-google-apps-marketplace-apps\/"},"modified":"2012-09-07T06:16:43","modified_gmt":"2012-09-07T11:16:44","slug":"top-10-google-apps-marketplace-apps","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/localhost\/wordpress\/2010\/03\/13\/top-10-google-apps-marketplace-apps\/","title":{"rendered":"Top 10 Google Apps Marketplace Apps"},"content":{"rendered":"
Written by Kevin Purdy<\/a><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Google’s Apps suite for domain owners and businesses has finally received some star treatment<\/a> with the launch of the Apps Marketplace<\/a>. Which Google-friendly apps are free, worth the cost, and entirely useful? These 10 are definitely worth a look.<\/p>\n Box.net<\/a> is one of many online file storage sites, but from its launch, it’s been focused on adding features that business and enterprise customers can use. Attached to your own web storage, Box.net’s features shine through. The service has many webapp partners that can fax, print, secure, edit, and otherwise handle all kinds of documents, and Box.net itself can integrate into many enterprise software packages, set up conference calls and web conferences centered around documents, and otherwise link together the files you’ve stashed away and the people who work on them. [Apps Marketplace link<\/a>] Price: free for Box.net business users, $15 per user per month for new users.<\/em><\/p>\n It’s an established tool that a lot of organizations are using to collect data on all kinds of topics. Better still, crafting a poll or questionnaire in SurveyMonkey<\/a> will save you a good deal of time over crafting a spreadsheet and form in Google Docs and manipulating the results. If you needed more incentive, the “Basic” plan is free for groups looking to just do a little smart polling, and “Basic” covers a whole lot of data-swapping goodness. [Apps Marketplace link<\/a>] Price: Free for basic version, $16.67 and up for advanced features<\/em>.<\/p>\n Google’s own Presentation app is one of those “Hey, it works” tools, and if you needed to write something up in a pinch, it’s there. SlideRocket<\/a>, on the other hand, is a surprisingly full-featured presentation editor that doesn’t require a Microsoft license and can be pulled up wherever you or your team have web access. Like the Aviary photo editor (below), installing SlideRocket in your Apps space puts everyone on the same page and centralizes where those presentations get stored. Alas, SlideRocket doesn’t sing in every browser\u2014it doesn’t play well with Firefox in Snow Leopard, for instance\u2014but when it works, it’s pretty wow-inducing. [Apps Marketplace link<\/a>] Price: 30-day free trial, $12 per user per month after that; Education and “lite” versions available.<\/em><\/p>\n Why would you use Google’s own link shortening service for your Apps account over popular, free options like bit.ly<\/a> or is.gd<\/a>? Primarily because the links you can provide clients and partners\u2014like GlobexIndustries.com\/B2B\u2014are more stately, feel safer, and haven’t already been snapped up on the major shortening servers. It also helps that you can make them far easier to remember than a random assortment of letters and numbers. It’s free, too, and that’s a pretty good selling point. [Apps Marketplace link<\/a>] Price: Free<\/em>.<\/p>\n10. Box.net<\/h5>\n
9. SurveyMonkey<\/h5>\n
8. SlideRocket<\/h5>\n
7. Google Short Links<\/h5>\n
6. Shared Contacts<\/h5>\n