While Google and other companies are introducing web-based document services, such as Google Docs — documents that you can also read on a mobile device — Soonr is focused on businesses that rely on desktop-based documents. The Campbell, Calif. and Denmark-based company makes money by reaching these customers through deals with mobile carriers.
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Soonr has been finding the most success with carriers in Europe, where its document service is bundled in with other services.. It has cut a number of deals there, including a partnership with TeliaSonera of Denmark.
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More than 50 percent of customers who use SoonR’s basic service through a carrier are choosing to upgrade to premium services, chief executive Patrick McVeigh tells me. While each carrier has a different, customized premium offering, a typical one will include extra storage space for documents as well as features like printing and faxing.
The company is testing its software with with unannounced partners and hopes to bring on many other carriers by the end of this year. It also has a joint development and marketing partnership with Texas and London-based mobile office services company QuickOffice.
It is working with Cisco on integration with WebEx’s PC Now — another service for accessing your documents from anywhere.
The company competes, in some sense, with a range of other online document storage services, ranging from Box.net to Apple’s .mac service. Neither of these services offer the same range of document file-type reading and sharing options that SoonR does, for mobile devices.
Previous investors Intel Capital and Clearstone Venture Partners also participated in the round. The company has received a total of $15.5 million to date. Our previous coverage here.
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