Slide 1What do these two products do?Key DifferencesSlide 4Why go through the trouble?Google appsGOOGLE APPSAdvantages of Google AppsSlide 9Slide 10EnhancementsMicrosoft ExchangeWhat about Microsoft?What about Microsoft? (cont)Slide 15Slide 16SourcesANDDaniel Chen5/13/2010WHAT DO THESE TWO PRODUCTS DO?E-mail/collaboration systemsHelps companies and employees manage emails in an efficient manner.Variety of functions such as scheduling, chatting, messaging, and mail management. “Exchange Server is an e-mail-based collaborative communications server for businesses. Licenses for Exchange can be purchased from Microsoft and its resellers.”“Our Google Apps solution for businesses is a packaged product of Google's best messaging and collaboration applications, among which include Gmail™, Google Talk, Google Calendar, Google Docs, Google Sites, and Google Video.”KEY DIFFERENCES Microsoft’s Exchange/Outlook service is on site based. -Requires server hardware Google Apps is cloud basedManesh Patel ,the senior vice president and CIO at Sanmina-SCI Corp, a San Jose-based contract manufacturer to switch the company's 16,000 users from the Microsoft Outlook/Exchange platform to the cloud based Google apps. Doing so created the risk of interrupting e-mail service, as well as the need to adapt to a new interface. So why did he do it?WHY GO THROUGH THE TROUBLE?“ The cost savings were simply too good to pass up.”Using Google Apps would save an estimated $1.9 million for the company. SCI shutdown and traded its 100 Exchange servers for Google Apps for Business.GOOGLE APPSGOOGLE APPSCloud basedScheduling and calendar functions similar to that of ExchangeAllows for continuous updates and upgrades.Companies can rely on Google’s IT staff to deal with any problems, should they arise.ADVANTAGES OF GOOGLE APPS “Temple's Stahler recalls an outage in September that lasted a couple of hours. Her users noticed the problem right away, but she says her team wasn't under fire because everyone realized that it was Google's problem. "Before, we would have been scrambling and would have had to drop everything," she says. But with Gmail, people simply accepted it. "They realized that Google had thousands of people working on it and that this was unusual."Small companies can now have an email service that has 99.9% uptime.However, if services do go offline Google’s liability is limited.How is Google Apps different from a free @gmail.com account? Our Google Apps solution for businesses is a packaged product of Google's best messaging and collaboration applications, among which include Gmail™, Google Talk, Google Calendar, Google Docs, Google Sites, and Google Video.You may have had experience using many of these applications with your [email protected] account, and while these applications are similar, we have enhanced them in Google Apps Premier Edition with these critical differences:1. Google Apps is for your businessWhen you sign up for Google Apps for your business, you sign up with your own company domain name. So rather than having a [email protected] email address, you would create or maintain a company email address such as [email protected]. There is an IT administrative control panel that is built into Google Apps for your business where an IT administrator can manage and control the user accounts across your company domain.2. Enhanced business-oriented featuresIncreased Access Controls: Puts your company in control of how your information is shared and communicated outside of your domain.Gmail: Saves all your corporate information with improved mailing list capabilities, and increased mail thresholdsGoogle Sites: Understanding that a company intranet and shared documentation is so critical to success, optimized to provide you with the right storage quotas to address your business needsGoogle Calendar: Enables conference room and resource sharing, allowing you to schedule office conference rooms or other shared resources in your office.Google Video: Share internal videos with your company quickly without the complex overhead of many other systemsENHANCEMENTS Third party developersIncrease uptimeMICROSOFT EXCHANGEWHAT ABOUT MICROSOFT?Microsoft has a 65% share of the enterprise messaging market.Large companies are used to the Exchange interface, so changing could lower productivity.Many claim that the Exchange offers more functions. "Google calendaring was not anywhere close to the Outlook/Exchange combination, and that really frustrated folks in the pilot," Brad Wright, vice president of communications technology at Jacobs Engineering Group> 25% liked it, 50% didn’t care and 25% did not like it.WHAT ABOUT MICROSOFT? (CONT)oAnother instance of a similar case was reported at Temple University and Chicago State University. oThe costs and benefits of switching from Microsoft Exchange to Google Apps may disappear if the company runs an efficient Exchange environment. oMicrosoft also has a cloud based Exchange service.Side-by-side comparisonExchange Online Standard vs. Google Apps for BusinessMicrosoft Exchange Online StandardPricing: $5 per seat per month ($60 per year); $2 per user per month for Exchange Online Deskless Workers.Components: E-mail, contacts, calendar and instant messaging. SharePoint, Office Live and Office Online are available as extra costs as part of Microsoft's Business Productivity Online Standard Suite. Maximum users supported: 30,000; larger deployments must be approved by Microsoft engineers.Product update cycle: Every 45 days.Mailbox size: 25GB (maximum without having to pay more)Compatibility with Outlook client: FullGuaranteed uptime: 99.9%Google Apps for Business Premier EditionPricing: $4.17 per seat per month ($50 per year). Components: Gmail for Business, Google Docs, Calendar, Groups, Sites and Video, and chat and instant messaging tools. Maximum seats supported: No limit Product update cycle: Continuous Mailbox size: 25GB (maximum without having to pay more) Compatibility with Outlook Client: Limited Guaranteed uptime: 99.9%; Google claims it averages less than 15 minutes of downtime per
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