What issues are there in using Gmail for a corporate email solution?
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Some people will feel uncomfortable with having their company email outside their company network. How to allay such fears? What other issues are there in using Google for corporate email? What are the benefits?
Google has a corporate solution called Google Apps. Your company could consider using that. The paid version of Google Apps has service level guarantees, which could be better than what your internal IT could provide.
As for advantages, Google has better spam filtering than most other email providers, because they have so much mail data they process (through their public Gmail service).
Disclosure: I don't work for Google nor have any relation to them. I do have domains on Google Apps, and I have also worked for places that do.
I have switched our company to Google Apps Enterprise, so I thought I would give some feedback based on an actual switch. So far, the switchover has been pretty smooth, and practically all user's old email has been able to be uploaded to the Google servers. Although it is a valid concern that Google could do something that would lose our data, it is much more likely that they will do a much much better job than we on infrastructure maintenance. About 10% of my users have been grumpy about the switch. Here are the valid grumpy comments:
1) Google Web Client does not allow the forwarding of multiple emails.
2) Attaching multiple attachments via drag & drop not possible.
3) Having to attach files individually and wait for them to upload is annoying.
4) They are used to folders in Outlook/Mozilla and refuse to abandon folders for the search function.
5) Heavy folder users have a hard time understanding the difference between folders and labels, and the fact that labels are not hierarchical.
6) No drag-and-drop onto labels.
Since an email client can still be used with the accounts, I have helped a small number of users configure their fat clients to connect using IMAP. In the future, only the web client will be "officially" supported.
I think you need to think carefully about offloading email to a third party if email is at all important to your business.
My key concerns would be (these apply to any email provider)
How long could you function with no email?
Can you migrate to another email provider
Do you have any legal requirement to keep ALL email for n years (lots of financial businesses do
How would your clients feel about having their emails to you stored on a third party server?
Do people email you sensitive data (health records maybe)?
Could you survive a loss of all your archived emails?
Specific concerns with Google (as of date of posting)
They don't have the best support record
Email isn't their primary business so they could decide to stop providing the service at any time
Our company has started looking at using Google Apps. The people in IT & dev can opt-in as beta testers. We've been using Outlook + Exchange (surprize) and the beta users have access to both.
The major benefits to me are the search and storage (it's set at 25GB compare to our Outlook's quota of 400MB...).
Also the keyboard shortcuts are really nice if you prefer using the keyboard (like me)
Some problems we have using Google Apps' mail over Outlook are
Calendar support: It doesn't have a feature to book resources (e.g. rooms)
Directory Service Integration: It doesn't have a concept of groups so setting up filters for mails from a certain group of people become quite cumbersome.
I guess many of the problems above are ok as long as everyone uses Google Apps.
We also use Google Apps, and it's a great solution for small businesses who don't want to deal with the availability and maintenance issues of an in-house solution.
However, sometimes the service has been flaky, with unexplicable and "policy" interruptions, sometimes without you noticing until you stop receiving e-mail or somebody else lets you know.
And their support is one of the worst that exists. Still, for us at least, it's worth the money ($0).
We haven't tested the Premier edition, but I hope they better offer a greater level of service than with the free edition.
Google seems to have had a series of issues where they're either reject mail targeted at mailing lists or, worse, will silently drop such emails on the floor. This seems to apply both to the for-pay Premier edition and the free Standard edition.
"spam" targeted at a mailing list goes nowhere - This critical issue means that you should never use Google-Apps "groups" (mailing lists) for anything that might involve email from the general public. There is a hacky workaround, but it doesn't inspire confidence.
If you do this then it is important to ensure that your ISP has direct peering to Google's network. When you access sites on the Internet, your packets often end up being carried across several different peer networks. You will want to keep that number to a minimum and for most companies, the lowest that you can get is to have only one network (your ISP's) between you and Google. This way, you ensure that the network path is under contract. One contract is with your ISP and one is with Google.
If your ISP doesn't peer with Google, then you should not start using Google Mail in production until you can change ISPs.
Google has a corporate solution called Google Apps. Your company could consider using that. The paid version of Google Apps has service level guarantees, which could be better than what your internal IT could provide.
As for advantages, Google has better spam filtering than most other email providers, because they have so much mail data they process (through their public Gmail service).
Disclosure: I don't work for Google nor have any relation to them. I do have domains on Google Apps, and I have also worked for places that do.
I have switched our company to Google Apps Enterprise, so I thought I would give some feedback based on an actual switch. So far, the switchover has been pretty smooth, and practically all user's old email has been able to be uploaded to the Google servers. Although it is a valid concern that Google could do something that would lose our data, it is much more likely that they will do a much much better job than we on infrastructure maintenance. About 10% of my users have been grumpy about the switch. Here are the valid grumpy comments:
1) Google Web Client does not allow the forwarding of multiple emails.
2) Attaching multiple attachments via drag & drop not possible.
3) Having to attach files individually and wait for them to upload is annoying.
4) They are used to folders in Outlook/Mozilla and refuse to abandon folders for the search function.
5) Heavy folder users have a hard time understanding the difference between folders and labels, and the fact that labels are not hierarchical.
6) No drag-and-drop onto labels.
Since an email client can still be used with the accounts, I have helped a small number of users configure their fat clients to connect using IMAP. In the future, only the web client will be "officially" supported.
I think you need to think carefully about offloading email to a third party if email is at all important to your business. My key concerns would be (these apply to any email provider)
Specific concerns with Google (as of date of posting)
Our company has started looking at using Google Apps. The people in IT & dev can opt-in as beta testers. We've been using Outlook + Exchange (surprize) and the beta users have access to both.
The major benefits to me are the search and storage (it's set at 25GB compare to our Outlook's quota of 400MB...). Also the keyboard shortcuts are really nice if you prefer using the keyboard (like me)
Some problems we have using Google Apps' mail over Outlook are
I guess many of the problems above are ok as long as everyone uses Google Apps.
We also use Google Apps, and it's a great solution for small businesses who don't want to deal with the availability and maintenance issues of an in-house solution.
However, sometimes the service has been flaky, with unexplicable and "policy" interruptions, sometimes without you noticing until you stop receiving e-mail or somebody else lets you know.
And their support is one of the worst that exists. Still, for us at least, it's worth the money ($0).
We haven't tested the Premier edition, but I hope they better offer a greater level of service than with the free edition.
Google seems to have had a series of issues where they're either reject mail targeted at mailing lists or, worse, will silently drop such emails on the floor. This seems to apply both to the for-pay Premier edition and the free Standard edition.
"spam" targeted at a mailing list goes nowhere - This critical issue means that you should never use Google-Apps "groups" (mailing lists) for anything that might involve email from the general public. There is a hacky workaround, but it doesn't inspire confidence.
Thread1 - known issue, subsequently fixed
Still unexplained delivery failure
I think the bigger reason is some people dont feel right hosting all of their email somewhere else than inside their own office.
My opinion is that if you could skip the exchange crack and use google apps it could save a company a lot of money.
If you do this then it is important to ensure that your ISP has direct peering to Google's network. When you access sites on the Internet, your packets often end up being carried across several different peer networks. You will want to keep that number to a minimum and for most companies, the lowest that you can get is to have only one network (your ISP's) between you and Google. This way, you ensure that the network path is under contract. One contract is with your ISP and one is with Google.
If your ISP doesn't peer with Google, then you should not start using Google Mail in production until you can change ISPs.
I think one issue is lack of support, there is a post on Joels site that describes losing access to a Google Apps account because of a domain issue.
Don't Ever Use Google Apps for Anything Important
Is email useful to you when your internet connection is down?
If so, not having the email server on your LAN may be an issue, if most of your staff are in the some office.