Snow Atlas is a cloud-native platform built from the ground up to provide Technology Intelligence for today’s hybrid enterprises. Based on a microservices architecture and standardized APIs, Snow Atlas provides a unified foundation for Snow’s IT asset management, SaaS management and FinOps solutions. It can be used to display all of the technology in an enterprise's IT stack, or to find opportunities to enhance, optimize and efficiently manage technology assets and share data with…
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Spiceworks Cloud Help Desk
Score 7.6 out of 10
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Spiceworks offers a set of free tools for IT network management and help desk support ticketing. The inventory management system essentially provides comprehensive device information for asset management.
$0
(free for 1-5 Seats)
Pricing
Snow Atlas
Spiceworks Cloud Help Desk
Editions & Modules
No answers on this topic
Core Plan
$0
Premium
$6
per month per user
Offerings
Pricing Offerings
Snow Atlas
Spiceworks Cloud Help Desk
Free Trial
No
No
Free/Freemium Version
No
Yes
Premium Consulting/Integration Services
No
No
Entry-level Setup Fee
No setup fee
No setup fee
Additional Details
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More Pricing Information
Community Pulse
Snow Atlas
Spiceworks Cloud Help Desk
Features
Snow Atlas
Spiceworks Cloud Help Desk
IT Asset Management
Comparison of IT Asset Management features of Product A and Product B
Snow Atlas
7.3
4 Ratings
7% below category average
Spiceworks Cloud Help Desk
-
Ratings
Software and hardware inventory tracking
8.34 Ratings
00 Ratings
License management
7.54 Ratings
00 Ratings
Asset lifecycle monitoring
7.23 Ratings
00 Ratings
Contract management
7.03 Ratings
00 Ratings
Asset relationship management
6.62 Ratings
00 Ratings
Incident and problem management
Comparison of Incident and problem management features of Product A and Product B
Snow Atlas
-
Ratings
Spiceworks Cloud Help Desk
8.5
55 Ratings
6% above category average
Organize and prioritize service tickets
00 Ratings
8.054 Ratings
Expert directory
00 Ratings
8.047 Ratings
Subscription-based notifications
00 Ratings
9.042 Ratings
ITSM collaboration and documentation
00 Ratings
6.045 Ratings
Ticket creation and submission
00 Ratings
10.054 Ratings
Ticket response
00 Ratings
10.053 Ratings
Self Help Community
Comparison of Self Help Community features of Product A and Product B
Snow Atlas
-
Ratings
Spiceworks Cloud Help Desk
7.0
52 Ratings
11% below category average
External knowledge base
00 Ratings
7.048 Ratings
Internal knowledge base
00 Ratings
7.048 Ratings
Multi-Channel Help
Comparison of Multi-Channel Help features of Product A and Product B
It's a great helpdesk solution - we currently have five years of data within it, roughly 25,000 tickets. The older edition is a great inventory and software license tracking tool. It is easy for users to use the interface and submit tickets and requests on the web, and its email integration is solid. The new version is a below-average system monitoring tool, only giving up/down status and a few other metrics.
SaaS connectors are not always kept up to date usually when Publishers make changes to their Portal API's. Appears to be little active monitoring on Flexera/Snow Atlas' side unless a customer reports an issue with the data being returned. Fixes are normally implemented as as quickly as possible, depending on whether it is considered a Bug Fix or a Feature Enhancement.
Users - Snow on SAM - No ability to add or bulk import manually. Completely reliant on AD Discovery or Entra ID Discovery
Users - SaaS module - No ability for bulk update of Users for things line 'Online only' or 'Qualified' user accounts. This is an issue in larger companies where you have thousands of SaaS Users being reported through connectors like Microsoft E365.
SaaS module Dashboard does not allow for filtering of insights to a specific Publisher.
Not all Back end SMACC functionality form Snow License Manager have been exposed to the front-end access, as Snow Atlas does not allow customer Administrators access to the back end or SQL databases.
If you are migrating from on-prem Snow License Manager to Atlas, migration tools have not been created by Snow and will require a Project to handle your migration. Without Migration tools, we had to use a Managed Service Partner who had to manually create a lot of their own scripts to retrieve data that cannot be downloaded via reports and imported into Atlas. Any attachments documentation on Agreement or License Records has to be manually re-attached/uploaded to the relevant Agreement/License records in Atlas as the migration was performed.
Spiceworks is a free tool, so there would be no hesitation if we are required to upgrade it. We have installed Spiceworks on a dedicated server with more than enough resources to get the most from this tool, so we will have this running in our department for years to come.
Spiceworks is user friendly and easy to set up. It can be customized to suit your needs. If there are any problems, you can go to the community forums for support and be in contact with many IT Pros, as well as the Spiceworks support staff and development teams who are always happy to help users out
Front line support staff done always understand the issue you are explaining or the need to escalate to back end/higher up areas for resolutions and can often require use of the Escalate function or emailing to your Account/Customer Success Manager. That said, once an issue properly is understood, it is handled well.
Spiceworks has been working out of the box, and some of the basic customizations have been successful with just our internal staff handling. We don't have any other issues with the tool. It provides us with the inventory information we want in a quick and concise report in a variety of formats for our team.
We should have spun up a Project to manage the implementation. Snow indicated to us the ease in which Snow Atlas could be implemented, however this did not factor in that we were migrating from their on-prem product Snow License Manager hosted through a Managed Servicer Partner. For a clean installation, your implementation can be quick and likely not require a Project. If you are migrating from another products or are a company that can have lots of stakeholders, fingers in the pie, hurdles/business processes that need to be adhered to, definitely use a Project to perform your implementation.
If you can spin up a VM to run it on, you'll thank yourself later. If you have remote sites, set up a local server (or dedicated computer) at each site and set them up as remote collectors for the main site. You'll save time and bandwidth
EGroupware UI is clunky and hard to use, Jira is great but the pricing is expensive in comparison with spice works that has a free version and you can test it out properly before buying and make a correct decision based on your business plan and company objectives with the right software.