| Executive Summary:
Enterprise messaging options for companies include inhouse email, such as Microsoft Exchange; hosted email; or a combination of the two. Learn about the pros and cons of each email option and important considerations you and your company must ponder before making any moves. |
Enterprise messaging has
evolved from the green-screen
experience of applications in
the 1980s to the newest generation
of email: Messaging delivered
as a service. But because
technology generations overlap each other,
deciding which messaging option or combination
of options to use can be more
complicated than meets the eye. Let’s look
at the newest generation, known as hosted email or email as a service, and the ways your existing email
deployment could evolve, plus what you need to consider as you chart your company’s messaging plan
for the future.
Three Messaging Options
Options for enterprise messaging are evolving as new computing paradigms appear. If we take a five-year
view from today, three major options appear that are viable alternatives:
- Use inhouse email based on a platform such as Microsoft Exchange or IBM Lotus Notes.
- Use email as a service, where the email service provider delivers all the necessary compute
power, storage, and application logic via the web (sometimes called delivery via the cloud).
- Use a hybrid approach by offering inhouse email for users who require a great deal of functionality
and hosted email service for users who need only the ability to send and receive messages.
Which option your organization should
choose depends on its current infrastructure,
its appetite for risk, the number of
users and their security requirements and
other needs, how much the company is
willing to invest in the provision of an email
service to users, and whether the company
has made other investments in the
email infrastructure that will be affected
by a move to a new platform. For example,
many large companies have deployed
Research in Motion’s (RIM’s) BlackBerry
Enterprise Server alongside Exchange or
Lotus Notes or have built applications
based on Exchange public folders or Lotus
Notes mail routing. It’s hard to migrate
to a new platform unless the new platform
offers equivalent functionality. I’ll
talk about more adoption considerations
in a moment. First, let’s look at the newest
option for email evolution—hosted email
or email as a service.
Email as a Service
Email as a service is related to software as
a service (SaaS), the software distribution
model where customers access applications
hosted by a service provider via the Internet.
Cost is usually the major driver for using
email as a service. A low-cost fixed-price
offering is an attractive proposition when
you consider the costs of servers, storage,
networks, software licenses, and technical
support necessary to run inhouse email.
Microsoft’s email-as-a-service solution is
Microsoft Exchange Online, which is based
on Exchange 2007. Part of Microsoft Online
Services, a set of enterprise-class software
offerings delivered as subscription services
and hosted by Microsoft, Exchange Online
should arrive toward the end of 2008, and
is available in standard and dedicated versions.
(For more information about Microsoft
Online Services and Exchange Online
see www.microsoft.com/online.) The standard
version provides an infrastructure that
hosts mailboxes from many different companies.
The dedicated version is for companies
with more than 5,000 users: Microsoft
builds out a server environment to host the
anticipated load. Both versions are based in
Microsoft data centers and offer 1GB mailboxes,
support for Windows Mobile devices,
Outlook Web Access (OWA), antivirus and
antispam, and 99.9 percent availability (the
claim of 99.9 percent availability needs to be tested over time).
The dedicated version offers some
optional services such as archiving, RIM
Blackberry support, and data migration
from an existing mail system. Customers
using Active Directory (AD) can set up single
sign-on (SSO) through a directory trust.
Google’s offering is Google Apps, which
includes Gmail with a 25GB mailbox, Google
Calendar, and Google Docs (e.g., word processing,
presentations, and spreadsheets).
Gmail is a perfectly acceptable email system
if you’re willing to accept a web-based or
IMAP client (including Microsoft Office
Outlook) and less integration between
components than is delivered by the Outlook-
Exchange combination. Google offers
antispam and antivirus services via its Postini
subsidiary and can provide enhanced
services for archiving, security, and compliance.
Moving to Gmail is straightforward if
you use only basic email features such as
Send and Receive messages. In particular,
companies whose email strategy depends
on POP3/IMAP4 based on a server such
as Sun Microsystems iPlanet will find it
easy to move to Gmail. However, companies
that currently use an inhouse email
system will run into problems associated
with migration, the client experience, and
interoperability. They might also find that
their needs for e-discovery, compliance,
and customization cause further complications. For example, some industry regulations
require that every outgoing message
(including those sent by mobile device)
is stamped with a disclaimer text—with
Gmail, it’s a challenge; with Exchange 2007,
it entails a relatively simple transport rule. In
the future, Google will likely develop Gmail
as a more fully featured email server and
improve its support for clients such as Outlook
as well as invest in utilities that improve
Gmail’s interoperability.
Speaking of support, that’s another
issue that Google has yet to address. Large
companies demand 24x7 support for applications
and they want the same quality of
support to be available in every country
where they do business. Google has no
background in delivering this type of support
and although it will probably develop
support capabilities over the next few years,
anyone considering Gmail for the enterprise
needs to consider this.
Microsoft announced list prices for its
standard service in July 2008, with Exchange
at $10 per mailbox or $15 for Microsoft Business
Productivity Online Standard Suite
(Exchange, SharePoint, Office Communications
Server, and Live Meeting). The annual
cost for Exchange Online is more expensive
than Google’s Gmail—the premier edition
of Google Apps costs $50 per user per year
(www.google.com/a/help/intl/en/admins/editions.html)—but it’s possibly justified
by the higher levels of functionality available
using Exchange. Exchange Online
doesn’t support Unified Messaging, probably
because of the difficulty of integrating
a standard service with multiple variants
of PBXs and telephony backbones. The list
prices from Microsoft and Google are guidelines
and depend on the number of seats,
their location worldwide, the services used,
the length of the contract, how the service is
supported, and the volume of business that
a company does with the vendor over time.
Microsoft’s email service is likely to
change over the coming years to incorporate
new technology and keep pace with Google.
The company is investing heavily in deploying
the data centers to support Exchange
as a service and in making changes in the
Exchange code base; you can expect to see
many of these changes in Exchange 14, due
in 2009.
Unlike Google, Microsoft has to perform
a balancing act as it develops its online presence. It doesn’t want to cannibalize
its traditional market, and because not all
of its software can yet run in the cloud,
it doesn’t want to force customers to use
cloud-based services because the change
might cause customers to consider non-
Microsoft options. If Microsoft gets it right,
online services will add to its overall market.
If not, it might be the start of an expensive
dismantling of its Office franchise.
Inhouse Email
Because the features in Exchange and Lotus
Notes have been assembled over the years,
these servers can meet the needs of large
enterprises in a way that a consumer-based
product can’t. For example, many companies
customize the display templates used by
Exchange to show details of objects fetched
from AD. New fields are added, fields are
removed, and display text altered to meet
the exact needs of the company. A well-populated
Global Address List (GAL) complete
with organizational information is a very
useful tool for anyone who has to navigate
through the organization. You can argue that
this level of detail can be easily traded for a
much lower cost of operation, until you compare
access to an LDAP directory through
whatever interface you select to go alongside
Gmail. Although the LDAP lookup works,
it’s not as easy for users and could actually
increase costs through lower productivity
and additional calls to the Help desk.
Another factor to consider is the health
and richness of the ecosystem around successful
products such as Exchange and Lotus
Notes. Google is doing its best to encourage
developers to leverage Google Apps and
no doubt will succeed over time. Indeed,
the fast iteration model used by Google for
application development means that new
solutions appear all the time. However, using
Gmail today might mean having to search for
new solutions to problems that have been
solved many times over on the Exchange
platform. Additionally, many companies
have built a complete collaboration environment
based on Microsoft technology (e.g.,
Exchange, SharePoint, and Office Collaboration
Server). It might be easy to replace
the messaging functionality delivered by an
inhouse email server by purchasing email
as a service, but you need to also consider
the overall collaboration environment of
your users. For example, customers using SharePoint Online can’t expect Microsoft to
allow them to deploy custom web parts in
Microsoft’s shared infrastructure.
Continue to page 2