Randolph News Now Acquired by North State Journal

June 30th, 2022

For Immediate Release

Randolph County’s leading breaking news site is now part of North Carolina’s only statewide newspaper.

ASHEBORO N.C. — A top local news site has been acquired by North Carolina’s only statewide newspaper. Randolph News Now, which focuses on breaking news and crime reporting in Randolph County, N.C., is now part of North State Media, publisher of the North State Journal newspaper.

“We are excited to bring additional newsgathering capabilities to North State Journal and to cement our place as the top local news source in Randolph County,” said North State Journal publisher Neal Robbins. “Breaking news requires local journalists with a strong work ethic and deep understanding of the community. With this acquisition, our Randolph County Edition can provide comprehensive news, sports and business coverage.”

Since 2021, Randolph News Now has seen skyrocketing readership through expanding coverage and increased advertising.

“The North State Journal was an obvious choice for us early on because they have the resources of a large statewide news outlet while being committed to local reporting,” said Scott Pelkey, editor of Randolph News Now. I’m excited to make the move with the website and work with their team of award-winning journalists.”

Founded in 2016, the North State Journal covers North Carolina from Murphy to Manteo. The newspaper is published weekly on Wednesdays has local editions in Randolph, Stanly, Moore, and Forsyth counties in addition to the statewide edition which is published in all 100 counties in the state. As other newspapers in North Carolina have reduced or eliminated coverage and staff, the North State Journal has taken the opportunity to recruit some of the best reporters and photojournalists from across the state.

Randolph News Now will maintain its focus on breaking news, crime, events and weather and content from the site will also be published on North State Journal’s website, randolphrecord.com and in the print editions of the NSJ.

The site will be transitioned to North State Journal’s branding and advertising platforms over the coming weeks. Advertising will be managed by North State Journal’s advertising manager, David Guy.

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Zoho – The Business App Provider We Wanted to Like, But Couldn’t

At Acme Solutions, we are always exploring new business software. Partly, this is to find the best fit for our needs at the time and partly to provide better recommendations to our small business clients.

In early 2022, we faced issues with having too many apps. Our accounting, email, project management, booking, client/team chat, automation, and site monitoring were all on separate platforms. Switching between so many apps was a nightmare, which led us to try Zoho.

Zoho is an Indian web-based suite of apps aiming to be your business’s operating system. If you need an app for any part of your business, Zoho has it.

From email to hiring, help desk to accounting, website chat to social media management, Zoho offers apps for all aspects of your business operations. Beyond moving your operations to a single provider, the interconnections between apps and easy employee management are major draws.

We tried many Zoho apps, including Zoho Mail, Zoho Books, Zoho Sign, SalesIQ, Zoho Social, Site24x7, CRM, Bigin, and more. Here’s what we thought:

The Good 👍

  • Zoho offers free trials for all their apps, allowing you to test them out before committing. Just be careful not to try too many at once, or your trials might expire before you fully set them up.
  • Zoho provides new businesses with credits to cover a portion of initial subscriptions, easing the migration process.
  • We liked the look and feel of Zoho Books and absolutely adored Bigin, a simpler CRM for smaller businesses. Zoho Sign worked well, and despite a complicated setup, Zoho Mail had a great layout and features.
  • Zoho’s support was responsive and helpful when we encountered issues.

The Bad 👎

  • While Zoho offers an app for everything, many seem to have been developed independently and later integrated, resulting in inconsistent support teams, settings menus, and button layouts. Each app feels more like a standalone product rather than part of a cohesive ecosystem.
  • Many Zoho apps fall short in features compared to free non-Zoho alternatives, often requiring a paid subscription to access functionalities available for free elsewhere. For example, while Zoho’s SalesIQ offers many features, its free plan lacks several features available on Tawk.to.

The Ugly 😕

Despite liking apps like Zoho Books, Bigin (CRM), and Zoho Social, we found many basic functionalities locked behind higher-tier plans and confounding decisions. Here are two examples that come to mind:

Zoho Books

Most small business could probably get away with the free tier, and the paid plans are affordable for those who need them, Zoho Books groups features in a way that doesn’t make any sense to us. For example, stock trading is on a cheaper plan than using a custom domain or the client portal, which seems illogical. Custom domains should be included in the free plan, first upgrade plan, or as an add-on feature. Having it on a mid-tier plan at nearly $100/mo while stock trading was on a more affordable plan felt so bizarre it felt like a cash grab to us.

Bigin

Bigin is a friendly CRM for smaller businesses to track sales. However, it locked the settings for changing the outgoing email to the admin account’s email address unless we upgraded to the Express plan. This is problematic because most companies have separate emails for sales, and being able to choose the email used to communicate with clients is such a basic feature of a CRM. This restriction, combined with other inconsistencies in Zoho apps, felt like another cash grab.

We had a similar issue with most of Zoho’s apps. In the end there were several issues with Zoho that kept us from making the switch.

  • Most apps don’t integrate or communicate well with each other (especially when compared with something like Google Workspace) making the whole system feel more like a hodgepodge of sperate apps thrown together.
  • Zoho’s pricing is a mess. While there is an option for ‘Zoho One’, a per user subscription with access to most of Zoho’s apps, it’s not clear if the subscription unlocks all features on those apps or only to a certain level or what to do with employees who only need access to a few apps.
  • Several of the apps required a subscription for features we could get for free with other services and paying just to stay in the ecosystem didn’t sit well with us.

Conclusion

There were a lot of apps in the Zoho ecosystem that we really liked, but there were also many buggy ones that still need some work. We had high hopes that the concept of a business operating system would work, but in the end, it wasn’t for us. Zoho isn’t a bad system, but it is geared more towards larger companies with teams of employees and less so for small businesses.

Don’t let that keep you from trying them out, though. As we said, we loved some of the apps, and if there is one that looks like it would work for your business, we say give it a try. Even if you only stay for that one app and don’t adopt the whole ecosystem. Zoho remains a dominant player in the business software sector and is a trusted name.

FYI

When we are trying out new software either for our business, reviewing it to decide if we want to recommend it to our clients, or to write on these articles about it we do not tell the company what we are doing and use the free trial or pay for the software ourselves. This is so we get the authentic experience the same as our clients would get.